Plasma parameter

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The plasma parameter is a dimensionless number, denoted by capital Lambda, Λ. The plasma parameter is usually interpreted to be the argument of the Coulomb logarithm, which is the ratio of the maximum impact parameter to the classical distance of closest approach in Coulomb scattering. In this case, the plasma parameter is given by:[1]

 \Lambda = 4\pi n \lambda_D^3

where

n is the number density of electrons,
λD is the Debye length.

This expression is typically valid for a plasma in which ion thermal velocities are much less than electron thermal velocities. A detailed discussion of the Coulomb logarithm is available in the NRL Plasma Formulary, pages 34–35.

Note that the word parameter is usually used in plasma physics to refer to bulk plasma properties in general: see plasma parameters.

An alternative definition of this parameter is given by the average number of electrons in a plasma contained within a Debye sphere (a sphere of radius the Debye length). This definition of the plasma parameter is more frequently (and appropriately) called the Debye number, and is denoted  N_D. In this context, the plasma parameter is defined as

 N_D = \frac {4\pi}{3} n \lambda_D^3

Since these two definitions differ only by a factor of three, they are frequently used interchangeably.

Often the factor of 4\pi/3 is dropped. When the Debye length is given by  \lambda_D = \sqrt{\frac{\epsilon_0 k T_e}{n_e q_e^2}}, the plasma parameter is given by[2]

 N_D = \frac{(\epsilon_0 k T_e)^{3/2}}{q_e^3 n_e^{1/2}}

where

ε0 is the permittivity of free space,
k is Boltzmann's constant,
qe is the electron charge,
Teis the electron temperature.

Confusingly, some authors define the plasma parameter as :

 \epsilon_p = \Lambda^{-1}\ .

Coupling parameter

A closely related parameter is the plasma coupling \Gamma, defined as a ratio of the Coulomb energy to the thermal one:

 \Gamma = \frac{E_\mathrm{C}}{kT_e} .

The Coulomb energy (per particle) is

 E_\mathrm{C} = \frac{q_e^2}{4\pi\epsilon_0\langle r \rangle},

where for the typical inter-particle distance \langle r \rangle usually is taken the Wigner-Seitz radius. Therefore,

 \Gamma = \frac{q_e^2}{4\pi\epsilon_0 kT_e}\sqrt[3]{\frac{4\pi n_e}{3}} .

Clearly, up to a numeric factor of the order of unity,

 \Gamma \sim \Lambda^{-2/3}\ .

In general, for multicomponent plasmas one defines the coupling parameter for each species s separately:

 \Gamma_s = \frac{q_s^2}{4\pi\epsilon_0 kT_s}\sqrt[3]{\frac{4\pi n_s}{3}} .

Here, s stands for either electrons or (a type of) ions.

The ideal plasma approximation

One of the criteria which determine whether a collection of charged particles can rigorously be termed an ideal plasma is that Λ>>1. When this is the case, collective electrostatic interactions dominate over binary collisions, and the plasma particles can be treated as if they only interact with a smooth background field, rather than through pairwise interactions (collisions).[3] The equation of state of each species in an ideal plasma is that of an ideal gas.

Plasma properties and Λ

Depending on the magnitude of Λ, plasma properties can be characterized as following:[4]

Description Plasma parameter magnitude
\Lambda \ll 1 ~ (\Gamma \gg 1) \Lambda \gg 1 ~ (\Gamma \ll 1)
Coupling Strongly coupled plasma Weakly coupled plasma
Debye sphere Sparsely populated Densely populated
Electrostatic influence Almost continuously Occasional
Typical characteristic Cold and dense Hot and diffuse
Examples Solid-density laser ablation plasmas
Very "cold" "high pressure" arc discharge
Inertial fusion experiments
White dwarfs / neutron stars atmospheres
Ionospheric physics
Magnetic fusion devices
Space plasma physics
Plasma ball

References

  1. Chen, F.F., Introduction to Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion, (Springer, New York, 2006)
  2. Miyamoto, K., Fundamentals of Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion, (Iwanami, Tokyo, 1997)
  3. J.D. Callen, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Draft Material for Fundamentals of Plasma Physics book: Collective Plasma Phenomena PDF
  4. See The plasma parameter lecture notes from Richard Fitzpatrick

External links