The two-stream instability is a very common
instability
In numerous fields of study, the component of instability within a system is generally characterized by some of the outputs or internal states growing without bounds. Not all systems that are not stable are unstable; systems can also be mar ...
in
plasma
Plasma or plasm may refer to:
Science
* Plasma (physics), one of the four fundamental states of matter
* Plasma (mineral), a green translucent silica mineral
* Quark–gluon plasma, a state of matter in quantum chromodynamics
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* Blood plas ...
physics. It can be induced by an energetic particle stream injected in a plasma, or setting a current along the plasma so different species (
ion
An ion () is an atom or molecule with a net electrical charge.
The charge of an electron is considered to be negative by convention and this charge is equal and opposite to the charge of a proton, which is considered to be positive by conven ...
s and
electron
The electron (, or in nuclear reactions) is a subatomic particle with a negative one elementary electric charge. Electrons belong to the first generation of the lepton particle family,
and are generally thought to be elementary partic ...
s) can have different drift velocities. The energy from the particles can lead to
plasma wave In plasma physics, waves in plasmas are an interconnected set of particles and fields which propagate in a periodically repeating fashion. A plasma is a quasineutral, electrically conductive fluid. In the simplest case, it is composed of electron ...
excitation.
Two-stream instability can arise from the case of two cold beams, in which no particles are resonant with the wave, or from two hot beams, in which there exist particles from one or both beams which are resonant with the wave.
Two-stream instability is known in various limiting cases as beam-plasma instability, beam instability, or bump-on-tail instability.
Dispersion relation in cold-beam limit
Consider a cold, uniform, and unmagnetized plasma, where ions are stationary and the electrons have velocity
, that is, the reference frame is moving with the ion stream. Let the electrostatic waves be of the form:
Applying linearization techniques to the equation of motions for both species, to the equation of continuity, and Poisson's equation, and introducing the spatial and temporal harmonic operators
,
we can get the following expression:
which represents the dispersion relation for longitudinal waves, and represents a quartic equation in
. The roots can be expressed in the form:
If the imaginary part (
) is zero, then the solutions represent all the possible modes, and there is no temporal wave growth or damping at all:
If
, that is, any of the roots are complex, they will occur in complex conjugate pairs. Substituting in the expression for electrostatic waves leads to:
Because of the second exponential function at the right, the temporal dynamics of the wave amplitude depends strongly on the parameter
; if
, then the waves will be exponentially damped; on the other hand, if
, then the waves are unstable and will grow at an exponential rate.
Wave–particle interactions
In the hot-beam case, the two-stream instability can be thought of as the inverse of
Landau damping In physics, Landau damping, named after its discoverer,Landau, L. "On the vibration of the electronic plasma". ''JETP'' 16 (1946), 574. English translation in ''J. Phys. (USSR)'' 10 (1946), 25. Reproduced in Collected papers of L.D. Landau, edited ...
. There are particles which have the same velocity as the wave. The existence of a greater number of particles that move slower than the wave phase velocity
as compared with those that move faster, leads to an energy transfer from the wave to the particles. In the case of the two-stream instability, when an electron stream is injected to the plasma, the particles' velocity distribution function has a "bump" on its "tail". If a wave has phase velocity in the region where the slope is positive, there is a greater number of faster particles (
) than slower particles, and so there is a greater amount of energy being transferred from the fast particles to the wave, giving rise to exponential wave growth.
In the cold-beam case, there are no particles which have the same velocity as the phase velocity of the wave (no particles are ''resonant''). However, the wave can grow exponentially even so; this is the case discussed in the above section. In this case, the beam particles are bunched in space in a propagating wave in a self-reinforcing way even though no particles move with the propagation velocity.
[{{Cite journal, last=Drummond, first=W. E. , display-authors=etal , date=September 1, 1970, title=Nonlinear Development of Beam-Plasma instability, journal=The Physics of Fluids, volume=13, issue=9, pages=2422–2425, bibcode=1970PhFl...13.2422D, doi=10.1063/1.1693255]
In both the hot-beam and cold-beam case, the instability grows until the beam particles are trapped in the electric field of the wave. This is when the instability is said to ''saturate''.
Bibliography
*Bittencourt, J. A. ''Fundamentals of Plasma Physics'', Third Ed. 2004 Springer-Verlag, New York.
*Chen, Francis F. ''Introduction to Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion''. Second Ed., 1984 Plenum Press, New York.
*Nicholson, D. R. ''Introduction to Plasma Theory''. 1983 John Wiley & Sons, New York.
*Tsurutani, B., and Lakhina, G. ''Some basic concepts of wave–particle interactions in collisionless plasmas''. Reviews of Geophysics 35(4), p. 491-502
References
Plasma instabilities