Nonlinear aspects of quantum plasma physics
Padma K. Shukla, Bengt Eliasson

TL;DR
This paper reviews nonlinear phenomena in dense quantum plasmas, highlighting new forces, wave interactions, turbulence, and magnetic field generation influenced by quantum effects like tunneling and spin.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of nonlinear wave interactions, turbulence, and magnetic structures in dense quantum plasmas, emphasizing quantum forces and spin effects.
Findings
Quantum forces enable high-frequency wave propagation.
Nonlinear wave interactions lead to complex plasma turbulence.
Mechanisms for magnetic field generation in quantum plasmas are discussed.
Abstract
Dense quantum plasmas are ubiquitous in planetary interiors and in compact astrophysical objects, in semiconductors and micro-mechanical systems, as well as in the next generation intense laser-solid density plasma interaction experiments and in quantum x-ray free-electron lasers. In contrast to classical plasmas, one encounters extremely high plasma number density and low temperature in quantum plasmas. The latter are composed of electrons, positrons and holes, which are degenerate. Positrons (holes) have the same (slightly different) mass as electrons, but opposite charge. The degenerate charged particles (electrons, positrons, holes) follow the Fermi-Dirac statistics. In quantum plasmas, there are new forces associated with i) quantum statistical electron and positron pressures, ii) electron and positron tunneling through the Bohm potential, and iii) electron and positron angular…
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