HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Gyrokinetics is a theoretical framework to study plasma behavior on perpendicular spatial scales comparable to the
gyroradius The gyroradius (also known as radius of gyration, Larmor radius or cyclotron radius) is the radius of the circular motion of a charged particle in the presence of a uniform magnetic field. In SI units, the non-relativistic gyroradius is given by :r_ ...
and frequencies much lower than the particle cyclotron frequencies. These particular scales have been experimentally shown to be appropriate for modeling plasma turbulence. The trajectory of charged particles in a magnetic field is a helix that winds around the field line. This trajectory can be decomposed into a relatively slow motion of the
guiding center In physics, the motion of an electrically charged particle such as an electron or ion in a plasma in a magnetic field can be treated as the superposition of a relatively fast circular motion around a point called the guiding center and a relati ...
along the field line and a fast circular motion, called gyromotion. For most plasma behavior, this gyromotion is irrelevant. Averaging over this gyromotion reduces the equations to six dimensions (3 spatial, 2 velocity, and time) rather than the seven (3 spatial, 3 velocity, and time). Because of this simplification, gyrokinetics governs the evolution of charged rings with a guiding center position, instead of gyrating charged particles.


Derivation of the gyrokinetic equation

Fundamentally, the gyrokinetic model assumes the plasma is strongly magnetized ( \rho_ \ll L_ ), the perpendicular spatial scales are comparable to the gyroradius ( k_ \rho_ \sim 1 ), and the behavior of interest has low frequencies ( \omega \ll \Omega_ \ll \Omega_ ). We must also expand the distribution function, f_ = f_ + f_ + \ldots, and assume the perturbation is small compared to the background (f_ \ll f_). The starting point is the
Fokker–Planck equation In statistical mechanics, the Fokker–Planck equation is a partial differential equation that describes the time evolution of the probability density function of the velocity of a particle under the influence of drag forces and random forces, as ...
and
Maxwell's equations Maxwell's equations, or Maxwell–Heaviside equations, are a set of coupled partial differential equations that, together with the Lorentz force law, form the foundation of classical electromagnetism, classical optics, and electric circuits. ...
. The first step is to change spatial variables from the particle position \vec to the guiding center position \vec. Then, we change velocity coordinates from (v_,v_,v_) to the velocity parallel v_ \equiv \vec \cdot \hat, the
magnetic moment In electromagnetism, the magnetic moment is the magnetic strength and orientation of a magnet or other object that produces a magnetic field. Examples of objects that have magnetic moments include loops of electric current (such as electromagnets ...
\mu \equiv \frac, and the gyrophase angle \varphi. Here parallel and perpendicular are relative to \vec \equiv \vec/B, the direction of the magnetic field, and m_ is the mass of the particle. Now, we can average over the gyrophase angle at constant guiding center position, denoted by \left\langle \ldots \right\rangle_, yielding the gyrokinetic equation. The electrostatic gyrokinetic equation, in the absence of large plasma flow, is given by \frac + \left( v_ \hat + \vec_ + \left\langle \vec_ \right\rangle_ \right) \cdot \vec_ h_ - \sum_ \left\langle C \left h_, h_ \right\right\rangle_ = \frac \frac - \frac \left\langle \vec_ \right\rangle_ \cdot \vec \psi . Here the first term represents the change in the perturbed distribution function, h_ \equiv f_ + \frac f_, with time. The second term represents particle streaming along the magnetic field line. The third term contains the effects of cross-field particle drifts, including the curvature drift, the grad-B drift, and the lowest order E-cross-B drift. The fourth term represents the nonlinear effect of the perturbed \vec \times \vec drift interacting with the distribution function perturbation. The fifth term uses a collision operator to include the effects of collisions between particles. The sixth term represents the Maxwell–Boltzmann response to the perturbed electric potential. The last term includes temperature and density gradients of the background distribution function, which drive the perturbation. These gradients are only significant in the direction across flux surfaces, parameterized by \psi, the
magnetic flux In physics, specifically electromagnetism, the magnetic flux through a surface is the surface integral of the normal component of the magnetic field B over that surface. It is usually denoted or . The SI unit of magnetic flux is the weber ...
. The gyrokinetic equation, together with gyro-averaged Maxwell's equations, give the distribution function and the perturbed electric and magnetic fields. In the electrostatic case we only require Gauss's law (which takes the form of the quasineutrality condition), given byF.I. Parra, M. Barnes, and A.G. Peeters. Up-down symmetry of the turbulent transport of toroidal angular momentum in tokamaks. Phys. Plasmas, 18(6):062501, 2011. \sum_ Z_ e B \int d v_ d\mu d\varphi h_ \left(\vec\right) = \sum_ \frac. Usually solutions are found numerically with the help of
supercomputers A supercomputer is a computer with a high level of performance as compared to a general-purpose computer. The performance of a supercomputer is commonly measured in floating-point operations per second ( FLOPS) instead of million instructions ...
, but in simplified situations analytic solutions are possible.


See also

* GYRO - a computational plasma physics code * Gyrokinetic ElectroMagnetic - a gyrokinetic plasma turbulence simulation *
List of plasma (physics) articles This is a list of plasma physics topics. A * Ablation * Abradable coating * Abraham–Lorentz force * Absorption band * Accretion disk * Active galactic nucleus * Adiabatic invariant * ADITYA (tokamak) * Aeronomy * Afterglow plasma * A ...


Notes

{{reflist


References

* J.B. Taylor and R.J. Hastie, Stability of general plasma equilibria - I formal theory. Plasma Phys. 10:479, 1968. * P.J. Catto, Linearized gyro-kinetics. Plasma Physics, 20(7):719, 1978. * R.G. LittleJohn, Journal of Plasma Physics Vol 29 pp. 111, 1983. * J.R. Cary and R.G.Littlejohn, Annals of Physics Vol 151, 1983. * T.S. Hahm, Physics of Fluids Vol 31 pp. 2670, 1988. * A.J. Brizard and T.S. Hahm, Foundations of Nonlinear Gyrokinetic Theory, Rev. Modern Physics 79, PPPL-4153, 2006.


External links


GS2:
A numerical continuum code for the study of
turbulence In fluid dynamics, turbulence or turbulent flow is fluid motion characterized by chaotic changes in pressure and flow velocity. It is in contrast to a laminar flow, which occurs when a fluid flows in parallel layers, with no disruption between ...
in fusion plasmas.
AstroGK:
A code based on GS2 (above) for studying turbulence in
astrophysical Astrophysics is a science that employs the methods and principles of physics and chemistry in the study of astronomical objects and phenomena. As one of the founders of the discipline said, Astrophysics "seeks to ascertain the nature of the hea ...
plasmas.
GENE:
A semi-global continuum turbulence simulation code, for fusion plasmas.

A particle in cell turbulence code, for fusion plasmas.
GKW:
A semi-global continuum gyrokinetic code, for turbulence in fusion plasmas.
GYRO:
A semi-global continuum turbulence code, for fusion plasmas.
GYSELA:
A semi-lagrangian code, for turbulence in fusion plasmas.
ELMFIRE:
Particle in cell monte-carlo code, for fusion plasmas.
GT5D
A global continuum code, for turbulence in fusion plasmas.
ORB5
Global particle in cell code, for electromagnetic
turbulence In fluid dynamics, turbulence or turbulent flow is fluid motion characterized by chaotic changes in pressure and flow velocity. It is in contrast to a laminar flow, which occurs when a fluid flows in parallel layers, with no disruption between ...
in fusion plasmas.
(d)FEFI
Homepage for the author of continuum gyrokinetic codes, for turbulence in fusion plasmas.
GKV
A local continuum gyrokinetic code, for turbulence in fusion plasmas.
GTC
A global gyrokinetic particle in cell simulation for fusion plasmas in toroidal and cylindrical geometries. Kinetics (physics) Plasma physics Theoretical physics