Theory of the Ion-Electron Temperature Relaxation Rate in Strongly Magnetized Plasmas
ORAL
Abstract
Recent works have shown that strongly magnetized plasmas characterized by having a gyrofrequency greater than the plasma frequency exhibit novel transport properties. One example is that the friction force on a test charge shifts, obtaining components perpendicular to its velocity in addition to the typical stopping power component antiparallel to its velocity. Here, we apply a recent generalization of the Boltzmann equation for strongly magnetized plasmas to calculate the ion-electron temperature relaxation rate. Strong magnetization is generally found to increase the temperature relaxation rate perpendicular to the magnetic field, and to cause the temperatures parallel and perpendicular to the magnetic field to not relax at equal rates. This, in turn, causes a temperature anisotropy to develop during the equilibration. Strong magnetization also breaks the symmetry of independence of the sign of the charges of the interacting particles on the collision rate, commonly known as the ``Barkas effect". It is found that the combination of oppositely charged interaction and strong magnetization causes the ion-electron parallel temperature relaxation rate to be significantly suppressed, scaling inversely proportional to the magnetic field strength.
*This research was supported by US DOE Award No. DE-SC0022202 and NSF Award No. PHY-2205506. It used Expanse at San Diego Supercomputer Center through allocation PHY-150018 from the Advanced Cyberinfrastructure Coordination Ecosystem: Services & Support (ACCESS) program, which is supported by National Science Foundation grants #2138259, #2138286, #2138307, #2137603, and #2138296
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Presenters
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Louis Jose
- University of Michigan