Jeans instability in a magneto-radiative dusty plasma

2008 ◽  
Vol 74 (6) ◽  
pp. 847-853 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. L. TSINTSADZE ◽  
ROZINA CHAUDHARY ◽  
H. A. SHAH ◽  
G. MURTAZA

AbstractThe importance of thermal radiation on the Jeans instability is discussed for a magnetized dusty plasma with gravitational effects. The one-fluid MHD equations are developed by assuming that the entropy of each subsystem of plasma is conserved, when the temperature of the plasma species is non-relativistic. The dispersion relation in this case shows that thermal radiation helps to stabilize the Jeans instability. It is shown that the plasma is stable in a certain range of wavelengths. The magnetic field stabilizes the Jeans instability when the wave propagates across the magnetic field. However, for oblique propagation it is seen that the magnetic field does not stabilize the Jeans instability.

2014 ◽  
Vol 80 (4) ◽  
pp. 565-579 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akbar Sabetkar ◽  
Davoud Dorranian

The nonlinear Zakharov–Kuznetsov and the modified Zakharov–Kuznetsov equations are derived for dust-acoustic solitary waves (DASWs) in a magnetized four-component dusty plasma system comprising negatively charged cold dust, non-extensive electrons, and two-temperature thermal ions using standard reductive perturbation method. The combined effects of electron non-extensivity, strength of magnetic field, and its obliqueness on the DASWs profile are analyzed. Different ranges of non-extensive q-parameter are considered. Our results show that solitary waves, that their amplitude and width of which depend sensitively on the q-non-extensive parameter, can exist. Due to electron non-extensivity, our dusty plasma model can admit positive potential as well as negative potential solitons. The strength of magnetic field has no effect on the amplitude of solitary waves, whereas its obliqueness affects both amplitude and width of the solitary waves structure. Results show that the amplitude of soliton increases with increasing the velocity of soltion. For any magnitude of q there is an extremum for the direction of the magnetic field at which the width of soliton is maximum.


1998 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 299-305 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fengxin Chen ◽  
Ping Wang ◽  
Chaoshun Qu

In this paper we study the system governing flows in the magnetic field within the earth. The system is similar to the magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) equations. For initial data in spaceLp, we obtained the local in time existence and uniqueness ofweak solutions of the system subject to appropriate initial and boundary conditions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 482
Author(s):  
Н.М. Горшунов ◽  
Е.П. Потанин

Equations are obtained that describe the characteristics of the azimuthal motion and radial expansion of a plasma jet under the action of a rotating transverse magnetic field of a dipole configuration in a longitudinal static magnetic field. The analysis was carried out both in the multicomponent approximation and on the basis of MHD equations taking into account the Hall effect. Based on the obtained dependences of the azimuthal and radial ion velocities on the magnetic field values, the separation characteristics of the direct-flow plasma centrifuge are estimated for the separation of a two-component binary mixture simulating spent nuclear fuel. It was shown that the concentration of the heavy uranium-plutonium component in the product flow can be increased from the initial 96 to 99.8% with a fuel component extraction of 0.87.


2020 ◽  
Vol 633 ◽  
pp. A87 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Griton ◽  
F. Pantellini

Context. As proven by measurements at Uranus and Neptune, the magnetic dipole axis and planetary spin axis can be off by a large angle exceeding 45°. The magnetosphere of such an (exo-)planet is highly variable over a one-day period and it does potentially exhibit a complex magnetic tail structure. The dynamics and shape of rotating magnetospheres do obviously depend on the planet’s characteristics but also, and very substantially, on the orientation of the planetary spin axis with respect to the impinging, generally highly supersonic, stellar wind. Aims. On its orbit around the Sun, the orientation of Uranus’ spin axis with respect to the solar wind changes from quasi-perpendicular (solstice) to quasi-parallel (equinox). In this paper, we simulate the magnetosphere of a fictitious Uranus-like planet plunged in a supersonic plasma (the stellar wind) at equinox. A simulation with zero wind velocity is also presented in order to help disentangle the effects of the rotation from the effects of the supersonic wind in the structuring of the planetary magnetic tail. Methods. The ideal magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) equations in conservative form are integrated on a structured spherical grid using the Message-Passing Interface-Adaptive Mesh Refinement Versatile Advection Code (MPI-AMRVAC). In order to limit diffusivity at grid level, we used background and residual decomposition of the magnetic field. The magnetic field is thus made of the sum of a prescribed time-dependent background field B0(t) and a residual field B1(t) computed by the code. In our simulations, B0(t) is essentially made of a rigidly rotating potential dipole field. Results. The first simulation shows that, while plunged in a non-magnetised plasma, a magnetic dipole rotating about an axis oriented at 90° with respect to itself does naturally accelerate the plasma away from the dipole around the rotation axis. The acceleration occurs over a spatial scale of the order of the Alfvénic co-rotation scale r*. During the acceleration, the dipole lines become stretched and twisted. The observed asymptotic fluid velocities are of the order of the phase speed of the fast MHD mode. In two simulations where the surrounding non-magnetised plasma was chosen to move at supersonic speed perpendicularly to the rotation axis (a situation that is reminiscent of Uranus in the solar wind at equinox), the lines of each hemisphere are symmetrically twisted and stretched as before. However, they are also bent by the supersonic flow, thus forming a magnetic tail of interlaced field lines of opposite polarity. Similarly to the case with no wind, the interlaced field lines and the attached plasma are accelerated by the rotation and also by the transfer of kinetic energy flux from the surrounding supersonic flow. The tailwards fluid velocity increases asymptotically towards the externally imposed flow velocity, or wind. In one more simulation, a transverse magnetic field, to both the spin axis and flow direction, was added to the impinging flow so that magnetic reconnection could occur between the dipole anchored field lines and the impinging field lines. No major difference with respect to the no-magnetised flow case is observed, except that the tailwards acceleration occurs in two steps and is slightly more efficient. In order to emphasise the effect of rotation, we only address the case of a fast-rotating planet where the co-rotation scale r* is of the order of the planetary counter-flow magnetopause stand-off distance rm. For Uranus, r*≫ rm and the effects of rotation are only visible at large tailwards distances r ≫ rm.


Symmetry ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (8) ◽  
pp. 1306
Author(s):  
Kirill Bronnikov ◽  
Vladimir Krechet ◽  
Vadim Oshurko

We find a family of exact solutions to the Einstein–Maxwell equations for rotating cylindrically symmetric distributions of a perfect fluid with the equation of state p=wρ (|w|<1), carrying a circular electric current in the angular direction. This current creates a magnetic field along the z axis. Some of the solutions describe geometries resembling that of Melvin’s static magnetic universe and contain a regular symmetry axis, while some others (in the case w>0) describe traversable wormhole geometries which do not contain a symmetry axis. Unlike Melvin’s solution, those with rotation and a magnetic field cannot be vacuum and require a current. The wormhole solutions admit matching with flat-space regions on both sides of the throat, thus forming a cylindrical wormhole configuration potentially visible for distant observers residing in flat or weakly curved parts of space. The thin shells, located at junctions between the inner (wormhole) and outer (flat) regions, consist of matter satisfying the Weak Energy Condition under a proper choice of the free parameters of the model, which thus forms new examples of phantom-free wormhole models in general relativity. In the limit w→1, the magnetic field tends to zero, and the wormhole model tends to the one obtained previously, where the source of gravity is stiff matter with the equation of state p=ρ.


Universe ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (5) ◽  
pp. 104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Efrain J. Ferrer ◽  
Aric Hackebill

We discuss how a magnetic field can affect the equation of state of a many-particle neutron system. We show that, due to the anisotropy in the pressures, the pressure transverse to the magnetic field direction increases with the magnetic field, while the one along the field direction decreases. We also show that in this medium there exists a significant negative field-dependent contribution associated with the vacuum pressure. This negative pressure demands a neutron density sufficiently high (corresponding to a baryonic chemical potential of μ = 2.25 GeV) to produce the necessary positive matter pressure that can compensate for the gravitational pull. The decrease of the parallel pressure with the field limits the maximum magnetic field to a value of the order of 10 18 G, where the pressure decays to zero. We show that the combination of all these effects produces an insignificant variation of the system equation of state. We also found that this neutron system exhibits paramagnetic behavior expressed by the Curie’s law in the high-temperature regime. The reported results may be of interest for the astrophysics of compact objects such as magnetars, which are endowed with substantial magnetic fields.


1971 ◽  
Vol 43 ◽  
pp. 24-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. V. Ramsay ◽  
R. G. Giovanelli ◽  
H. R. Gillett

The magnetograph is based on a high-resolution filter which serves in place of a spectrograph, except that a reasonably large field of view (one-quarter of the Sun's diameter) can be observed at the one instant. Observations are made by obtaining filtergrams of opposite circular polarizations simultaneously in the wing of a magnetically sensitive line. Exposure times are about 0.3 s, the angular resolution of the magnetic field is about 2 arc s, closest frame repetition rates about 8 s. The filtergrams are processed subsequently by photographic or television subtraction. Semiautomatic photographic and/or TV subtractions yield magnetograms suitable for cinematographic projection though the subtractions are not yet as perfect as those obtained by individual subtraction.


2003 ◽  
Vol 125 (6) ◽  
pp. 952-962 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Midya ◽  
G. C. Layek ◽  
A. S. Gupta ◽  
T. Ray Mahapatra

An analysis is made of the flow of an electrically conducting fluid in a channel with constrictions in the presence of a uniform transverse magnetic field. A solution technique for governing magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) equations in primitive variable formulation is developed. A coordinate stretching is used to map the long irregular geometry into a finite computational domain. The governing equations are discretized using finite difference approximations and the well-known staggered grid of Harlow and Welch is used. Pressure Poisson equation and pressure-velocity correction formulas are derived and solved numerically. It is found that the flow separates downstream of the constriction. With increase in the magnetic field, the flow separation zone diminishes in size and for large magnetic field, the separation zone disappears completely. Wall shear stress increases with increase in the magnetic field strength. It is also found that for symmetrically situated constrictions on the channel walls, the critical Reynolds number for the flow bifurcation (i.e., flow asymmetry) increases with increase in the magnetic field.


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