Dust-ion-acoustic nonlinear waves in a dusty electronegative plasma with vortex-like negative ions

2012 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 233-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. ROY ◽  
S. S. DUHA ◽  
A. A. MAMUN

AbstractThe basic features of the nonlinear waves, which are associated with positive ion dynamics and dust charge fluctuation, have been investigated by employing the reductive perturbation method in a dusty electronegative plasma containing Boltzmann electrons, vortex-like negative ions, mobile positive ions, and charge fluctuating stationary dust (negatively charged). It has been observed that the basic features of the nonlinear waves (viz. amplitude, width, speed, etc.) in the plasma system under consideration have been significantly modified by the trapping parameter (introduced for vortex-like distribution of negative ions). The implications of the results (obtained from this investigation) in space and laboratory experiments have been briefly discussed.

2010 ◽  
Vol 76 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 409-418 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. A. MAMUN ◽  
K. S. ASHRAFI ◽  
M. G. M. ANOWAR

AbstractThe dust ion-acoustic solitary waves (SWs) in an unmagnetized dusty adiabatic electronegative plasma containing inertialess adiabatic electrons, inertial single charged adiabatic positive and negative ions, and stationary arbitrarily (positively and negatively) charged dust have been theoretically studied. The reductive perturbation method has been employed to derive the Korteweg-de Vries equation which admits an SW solution. The combined effects of the adiabaticity of plasma particles, inertia of positive or negative ions, and presence of positively or negatively charged dust, which are found to significantly modify the basic features of small but finite-amplitude dust-ion-acoustic SWs, are explicitly examined. The implications of our results in space and laboratory dusty electronegative plasmas are briefly discussed.


2010 ◽  
Vol 77 (1) ◽  
pp. 133-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. G. M. ANOWAR ◽  
K. S. ASHRAFI ◽  
A. A. MAMUN

AbstractThe basic features of obliquely propagating dust ion-acoustic (DIA) solitary waves in an adiabatic magnetized dusty electronegative plasma (containing Boltzmann electrons, Boltzmann negative ions, adiabatic positive ions, and negatively charged stationary dust) have been investigated. The reductive perturbation method has been employed to derive the Korteweg–de Vries (KdV) equation which admits a solitary wave solution. The combined effects of ion adiabaticity and external magnetic field (obliqueness), which are found to significantly modify the basic features of the small but finite-amplitude DIA solitary waves, are explicitly examined. The implications of our results in space and laboratory dusty plasmas are briefly discussed.


1936 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 482-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. A. Smith

When an electron makes a transition from a continuous state to a bound state, for example in the case of neutralization of a positive ion or formation of a negative ion, its excess energy must be disposed of in some way. It is usually given off as radiation. In the case of neutralization of positive ions the radiation forms the well-known continuous spectrum. No such spectrum due to the direct formation of negative ions has, however, been observed. This process has been fully discussed in a recent paper by Massey and Smith. It is shown that in this case the spectrum would be difficult to observe.


1988 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank Verheest

Ion-acoustic solitons in a plasma with different adiabatic ion constituents and isothermal electrons are studied via a reductive perturbation method. The basic fluid equations then give rise to KdV or modified KdV equations, depending upon the relative ion densities. At critical densities, rarefactive and compressive fast ion-acoustic solitons are possible. Explicit stationary solutions are discussed in the special case of cold ions, in a plasma containing two species of negative ions and one of positive ions. The inclusion of heavier ions, even at low densities, increases the amplitudes of the critical solitons.


2009 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
pp. 389-393 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. A. MAMUN

AbstractA dusty plasma consisting of cold and hot electrons, cold ions, and charge fluctuating isolated cold dust has been considered. It has been shown by a normal mode analysis that in such a dusty plasma there exists a new type of electrostatic perturbation mode due to the charge fluctuation of the isolated dust. The basic features of this new electrostatic perturbation mode, which are different from those of the electron-acoustic waves, have also been analytically identified. The implications of these results in both the space and laboratory dusty plasma conditions are briefly discussed.


The ionized regions of the upper atmosphere include, not only neutral atoms and molecules, electrons and positive ions, but also negative ions. Of these, electrons are alone effective in producing reflexion of wireless waves; so that an electron attached to a neutral molecule to form a negative ion is as effectively removed from active participation in these phenomena as one recombined with a positive ion to form a neutral molecule. The decay of electron density at night has been attributed by some authors to recombination with positive.ions and by others to attachment by neutral molecules. The first process is in agreement with the observed law of decay and has the additional advantage of making it easily possible to understand the formation of layers of concentrated ionization; on the other hand, the chance of attachment to a molecule per impact would have to be extremely small for the attachment rate to be negligible, since the number of collisions per second with neutral atoms is very much greater than with positive ions.


The three previous papers of this series (Arnot and Milligan 1936 b ; Arnot 1937 a, b ) contain an account of experimental work which led the senior author to propose a new process of negative-ion formation. This process is the formation of negative ions at metal surfaces by bombardment of the surface with positive ions, the negative ion being formed by the positive ion capturing two electron from the surface. Further work carried out during the past year, which is described in this paper, has revealed a new variation of the above process. In this latter process the impinging positive ion causes an adsorbed atom on the surface to come off as a negative ion. It is believed that this newer process is essentially similar to the process previously reported, the difference being due merely to the transference of excitation energy from the incident positive ion, after its capture of an electron, to the atom adsorbed on the surface. The discovery of this second effect was made independently by Sloane and Press (1938), although they attribute it to a different process.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua Dreyer ◽  
Erik Vigren ◽  
Michiko Morooka ◽  
Jan-Erik Wahlund ◽  
Stephan Buchert ◽  
...  

<p>We combine RPWS/LP and INMS data from Cassini's Grand Finale orbits into Saturn's lower ionosphere to calculate the effective recombination coefficient α<sub>300</sub> at a reference electron temperature of 300 K. Assuming photochemical equilibrium at altitudes below 2500 km and using an established method to determine the electron production rate, we derive upper limits for α<sub>300</sub> of ∼ 2.5∗10<sup>-7</sup> cm<sup>3 </sup>s<sup>-1</sup>, which suggest that Saturn's ionospheric positive ions are dominated by species with low recombination rate coefficients.<br />An ionosphere dominated by water group ions or complex hydrocarbons, as previously suggested, is incompatible with this result, as these species have recombination rate coefficients > 5∗10<sup>-7</sup> cm<sup>3 </sup>s<sup>-1</sup> at an electron temperature of 300 K. The results do not give constraints on the nature of the negative ions.</p>


The quantal theory of negative ions has now been developed considerably (Massey and Smith 1936; Massey 1938), but on account of difficulties of computing it is usually necessary to assume rather than to prove that a given ion exists, and then to discuss the probability of its formation by different processes. The work described here is a contribution to the experimental side of this subject. It had its origin in a projected attempt to measure the capture cross-section of mercury atoms for electrons, as a verification of Massey and Smith's (1936) then unpublished theory of this process. In considering this it became clear that the experiment would be one of unusual difficulty. Before proceeding with it, therefore, it was decided to verify the existence of Hg - as a stable entity, which is assumed in the quantal theory. this was in doubt since Stille (1933), in some careful experiments, had recently failed to obtain it from the plasma of various forms of discharge through mercury vapour, although it is known that negative ions tend to accumulate in such regions (Emeleus and Sayers 1938). Whilst one of us was repeating his experiments, with modifications which led to essentially the same results and will be describes elsewhere, Arnot and Milligan (1936 b ) reported that they had obtained Hg - by bombardment of metal surfaces with Hg + . A comparison of their work with our own showed only one essential point of difference, namely that the construction of their apparatus did not permit of degassing in situ , a condition satisfied with our tubes. Both for this reason and because of the intrinsic importance of their discovery it was thought desirable to repeat part of their work, with apparatus geometrically similar in electrode construction, but capable of being degassed in a furnace under vacuum. We were again unable to obtain Hg - after the apparatus had been degassed and in operation for a short of that of Hg - was obtained. There were, however, always present several light negative ions, which had the excess energies found by Arnot and Milligan (1936 b ) with Hg - . The conditions under which these were formed led us to suppose that they were produced by bombardment of the metal surfaces by mercury positive ions (Press 1937; Sloane 1937) and not capture of electrons by positive ions of the same species, the process suggested by Arnot and Milligan (1936 b ). The existence of a process of this type, which may be conveniently termed "sputtering" (Sloane and Press 1938), is also implied by some earlier work by J. S. Thompson (1931) which has, so far as we know, never been published in detail. It is, however, impossible to decide definitely ion (e. g. CO - ) when it hits the surface, so long as one is producing the negative ions on a metal surface in a plasma or ionization chamber. One cannot overlook the possibility of the negative ion being formed from its own positive ion, since the latter may be present in the plasma or ionization chamber, and CO + , for example, was in fact shown in our work to be there from the positive-ion mass spectra, although in quantity only a fraction of 1% of Hg + . An unambiguous decision on this point can only be reached by first isolating a particular positive ion by a mass spectrograph, then bombarding a surface by this in a high vacuum , and finally making a mass spectrographic and energy distribution analysis of the resultant negative ions. We have built a double mass spectrograph for this purpose and find that negative ions of one kind possessing energies in excess of that imparted to them by the accelerating fields can be produced by bombardment with positive ions of another kind (Sloane and Press 1938). An account of the experiments with the single mass spectrograph is given in 1. the experiments with the double mass spectrograph are described in 2.


The velocity of ions in gases at reduced pressures was first investigated by Rutherford and by Langevin. Recently the author and others have carried out similar investigations. The results of these investigations show that for the negative ions in air the product of the mobility and the pressure is constant for pressures ranging from 760 mm. to 200 mm. of mercury, but with further reduction the product increases with the reduction of pressure, this increase becoming very great at low pressures. For the positive ions in air the product of the mobility and pressure is constant for pressures investigated between 760 mm. and 3 mm. of mercury. Similar results were obtained for the mobilities of the ions in other gases. The results show that if the ion is an aggregation of molecules, this aggregation becomes, at low pressures, less complex in the ease of the negative ion, while in the ease of the positive ion it persists down to 3 mm. of mercury. The purpose of the present research was the study of the mobilities of both kinds of ions in gases at high pressures. The method of investigation is based on the mathematical expression, developed by Prof. Rutherford, for the current between two plates, assuming that a very intense ionisation exists near the surface of one of the electrodes.


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