Quantum-mechanical substantiation of a similar change in the kinetic energy component of an electron along the magnetic field within each Landau level

2006 ◽  
Vol 49 (10) ◽  
pp. 1039-1044
Author(s):  
G. A. Shul’man ◽  
V. S. Kostko
1981 ◽  
Vol 93 ◽  
pp. 233-233
Author(s):  
E. E. Salpeter

For material accreting along the magnetic field axis of a neutron star, electrons are quantized into Landau orbits. Collisional excitation of the first excited Landau level, followed by radiative decay, leads to the emission of a cyclotron line. The expected line is broad, because the optical depth is large, and its shape is difficult to calculate. Redshifts due to the recoil of a scattering electron and blueshifts due to scattering from the infalling accretion column are being calculated by I. Wasserman, as well as the proton stopping length in the presence of a magnetic field.


1983 ◽  
Vol 72 ◽  
pp. 199-205
Author(s):  
Steven H. Langer ◽  
G. Chanmugam ◽  
G. Shaviv

In this talk, we consider cataclysmic variable systems containing a white dwarf with a strong magnetic field. These include systems like AM Her (see, e.g., Chiappetti, Tanzi, and Treves 1981) in which the white dwarf rotates at the orbital period and systems such as AE Aquari in which the white dwarf rotates much faster than synchronously (see Patterson et al. 1980). The magnetic field in all of these systems is strong enough to disrupt the accretion disk at a point far above the surface of the white dwarf and may prevent the formation of a disk altogether. We will present theoretical models for the temperature, density, and velocity structure of the accretion flow in the region near the surface of the white dwarf where the kinetic energy of the flow is thermalized and radiated in the form of X-rays and ultraviolet radiation. This information is required to calculate accurate model spectra, and the results also have immediate consequences for the interpretation of observations.


1995 ◽  
Vol 299 ◽  
pp. 153-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. A. Davidson

It is well known that the imposition of a static magnetic field tends to suppress motion in an electrically conducting liquid. Here we look at the magnetic damping of liquid-mental flows where the Reynolds number is large and the magnetic Reynolds number is small. The magnetic field is taken as uniform and the fluid is either infinite in extent or else bounded by an electrically insulating surface S. Under these conditions, we find that three general principles govern the flow. First, the Lorentz force destroys kinetic energy but does not alter the net linear momentum of the fluid, nor does it change the component of angular momentum parallel to B. In certain flows, this implies that momentum, linear or angular, is conserved. Second, the Lorentz force guides the flow in such a way that the global Joule dissipation, D, decreases, and this decline in D is even more rapid than the corresponding fall in global kinetic energy, E. (Note that both D and E are quadratic in u). Third, this decline in relative dissipation, D / E, is essential to conserving momentum, and is achieved by propagating linear or angular momentum out along the magnetic field lines. In fact, this spreading of momentum along the B-lines is a diffusive process, familiar in the context of MHD turbulence. We illustrate these three principles with the aid of a number of specific examples. In increasing order of complexity we look at a spatially uniform jet evolving in time, a three-dimensional jet evolving in space, and an axisymmetric vortex evolving in both space and time. We start with a spatially uniform jet which is dissipated by the sudden application of a transverse magnetic field. This simple (perhaps even trivial) example provides a clear illustration of our three general principles. It also provides a useful stepping-stone to our second example of a steady three-dimensional jet evolving in space. Unlike the two-dimensional jets studied by previous investigators, a three-dimensional jet cannot be annihilated by magnetic braking. Rather, its cross-section deforms in such a way that the momentum flux of the jet is conserved, despite a continual decline in its energy flux. We conclude with a discussion of magnetic damping of axisymmetric vortices. As with the jet flows, the Lorentz force cannot destroy the motion, but rather rearranges the angular momentum of the flow so as to reduce the global kinetic energy. This process ceases, and the flow reaches a steady state, only when the angular momentum is uniform in the direction of the field lines. This is closely related to the tendency of magnetic fields to promote two-dimensional turbulence.


2008 ◽  
Vol 599 ◽  
pp. 1-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
KRISTOPHER R. SCHUMACHER ◽  
JAMES J. RILEY ◽  
BRUCE A. FINLAYSON

The general equations necessary for a basic theoretical interpretation of the physics of turbulence in ferrofluids are presented. The equations are examined and show multiple novel turbulence aspects that arise in ferrofluids. For example, two new modes of turbulent kinetic energy and turbulent kinetic energy dissipation rate occur, and unique modes of energy conversion (rotational to/from translational kinetic energy and magnetic energy to/from turbulent kinetic energy) are exhibited in turbulent ferrofluid flows. Furthermore, it is shown that potential models for turbulence in ferrofluids are complicated by additional closure requirements from the five additional nonlinear terms in the governing equations. The equations are applied to turbulence of a ferrofluid in the presence of a steady magnetic field (as well as the case of no magnetic field) in order to identify the importance of the new terms. Results are presented for the enhanced anisotropy in the presence of a magnetic field, and results show how turbulence properties (both classical ones and new ones) vary with the strength of the magnetic field. Three different equations for the magnetization are examined and lead to different results at large magnitudes of the applied magnetic field.


Open Physics ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Joung Sug ◽  
Su Lee ◽  
Jong Kim

AbstractWe study the optical Quantum Transition Line Shapes (QTLS) which show the absorption power and the Quantum Transition Line Widths (QTLW) of electron-deformation potential phonon interacting systems. In order to analyze the quantum transition, we compare the magnetic field dependencies of the QTLWand the QTLS on two transition processes, namely the intra-Landau level transition process and the inter-Landau level transition process. We apply the Quantum Transport theory (QTR) to the system in the confinement of electrons by square well confinement potential. We use the projected Liouville equation method with Equilibrium Average Projection Scheme (EAPS).


1989 ◽  
Vol 04 (15) ◽  
pp. 3939-3949 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. R. KLAUDER ◽  
E. ONOFRI

The geometrical approach to phase-space quantization introduced by Klauder [KQ] is interpreted in terms of a universal magnetic field acting on a free particle moving in a higher dimensional configuration space; quantization corresponds to freezing the particle to its first Landau level. The Geometric Quantization [GQ] scheme appears as the natural technique to define the interaction with the magnetic field for a particle on a general Riemannian manifold. The freedom of redefining the operators' ordering makes it possible to select that particular definition of the Hamiltonian which is adapted to a specific polarization; in this way the first Landau level acquires the expected degeneracy. This unification with GQ makes it clear how algebraic relations between classical observables are or are not preserved under quantization. From this point of view all quantum systems appear as the low energy sector of a generalized theory in which all classical observables have a uniquely assigned quantum counterpart such that Poisson bracket relations are isomorphic to the commutation relations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeff Murugan ◽  
Jonathan P. Shock ◽  
Ruach Pillay Slayen

Abstract This work is a continuation of our recent study of non-relativistic charged particles, confined to a sphere enclosing a magnetic dipole at its center [1]. In this sequel, we extend our computations in two significant ways. The first is to a relativistic spin-$$ \frac{1}{2} $$ 1 2 fermion and the second concerns the interpretation of the physics. Whereas in [1] we speculated on the possibility of observing such condensed matter systems in the astrophysics of extreme magnetic sources such as neutron stars, the physical systems in this study are more down-to-earth objects such as a C60 fullerine enclosing a current loop. We unpack some of the details of our previous analysis for the spinless fermion on the dipole sphere and adapt it to solve the eigenvalue problem for the single-particle Dirac Hamiltonian. In the strong-field/small-radius limit, the spectrum of the spin-$$ \frac{1}{2} $$ 1 2 Hamiltonian, like the spinless case, exhibits a Landau level structure in the |m| ≪ Q regime. It features a new, additional (approximately) zero-energy lowest Landau level which persists into the |m| < Q regime. As in the spinless system, the spectrum exhibits level-crossing as the strength of the magnetic field increases, with the wavefunctions localising at the poles in the strong-field/small-radius limit.


2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (S294) ◽  
pp. 549-550 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Feng ◽  
Weiqun Gan

AbstractWe analyze coronagraph observations of a polar jet eruption observed by SECCHI/STEREO. The brightness distribution of the jet in white-light coronagraph images is compared with a kinetic particle model. In this first application, we consider only gravity as the dominant force on the jet particles along the magnetic field. The kinetic model explains well the observed brightness evolution. The initial particle velocity distribution is fitted by Maxwellian distributions and we find deviations of the high energy tail from the Maxwellian distributions. The jets total mass is between 3.2×1014 and 1.8×1015 g. The total kinetic energy of all the particles in the jet source region amounts from 2.1×1028 to 2.4×1029 ergs.


1971 ◽  
Vol 43 ◽  
pp. 3-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacques M. Beckers

The different methods which have been used, or which may be used in the future, to measure solar magnetic fields are described and discussed. Roughly these can be divided into three groups (a) those which use the influence of the magnetic field on the electromagnetic radiation, (b) those which use the influence of the field on the structure of the solar atmosphere (MHD effects), and (c) those which use theoretical arguments. The former include the Zeeman effect, the Hanle effect, the gyro and synchrotron radiations and the Faraday rotation of radiowaves. The second includes the alignment of details at all levels of the solar atmosphere, and the calcium network, and the third makes use, for example, of the assumption of equipartition between magnetic and kinetic energy density.


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