Title :
Fermi acceleration revisited-from cosmic rays to discharge heating
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., California Univ., Berkeley, CA, USA
Abstract :
Summary form only given, as follows. The motion of a ball bouncing between a fixed and an oscillating wall was originally proposed by Fermi in 1949 as a model for cosmic ray acceleration. Expectations that the ball could be heated to very high energies gave way to the realization that while the motion is chaotic at low energies, the phase space has an intricate fractal structure and there is an adiabatic limit to the heating. Adding a small dissipation changes the steady state chaos to a transient phenomenon, but a larger dissipation restores steady state chaos on a new fractal structure-a strange attractor. The application of these ideas to the "collisionless" or "stochastic" heating of charged particles in plasma discharges by time-periodic fields has been very fruitful. However, the purely dynamical phase randomization is here replaced by a (interparticle) collisional randomization at all but the lowest gas pressures. In both cases, a phase-averaged Fokker-Planck description of the motion can be used to determine the heating rate. Especially at low pressures, collisionless heating has been found to be important in RF-driven capacitive discharges, in microwave-driven electron cyclotron resonance discharges, and, more recently, in RF-driven inductive discharges. The latter application harks back to the discovery by Pippard, also in 1949, of the anomalous high frequency skin resistance in metals at low temperatures.
Keywords :
Fokker-Planck equation; astrophysical plasma; chaos; cosmic ray propagation; cosmic rays; cyclotron resonance; discharges (electric); fractals; high-frequency discharges; plasma collision processes; plasma heating; plasma kinetic theory; plasma radiofrequency heating; plasma transport processes; HF skin resistance; RF-driven capacitive discharges; RF-driven inductive discharges; adiabatic limit; chaotic motion; collisionless heating; cosmic ray acceleration; cosmic rays; discharge heating; dynamical phase randomization; fixed wall; fractal structure; heating rate; interparticle collisional randomization; microwave-driven electron cyclotron resonance discharges; oscillating wall; phase space; phase-averaged Fokker-Planck description; plasma discharges; steady state chaos; stochastic heating; strange attractor; time-periodic fields; transient phenomenon; Acceleration; Chaos; Cosmic rays; Cyclotrons; Electromagnetic heating; Electrons; Fractals; Plasma applications; Space heating; Steady-state;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science, 1995. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts., 1995 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Madison, WI, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2669-5
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.1995.531736