Vlasov-Maxwell, self-consistent electromagnetic wave emission simulations in the solar corona
David Tsiklauri (Queen Mary University of London)

TL;DR
This study employs 1.5D Vlasov-Maxwell simulations to explore electromagnetic wave emission mechanisms in the solar corona, revealing effects of density gradients and instabilities on plasma radiation generation.
Contribution
First self-consistent kinetic simulation of electromagnetic emission in the solar corona context, analyzing effects of density gradients and Larmor-drift instability on wave generation.
Findings
Larmor-drift instability causes electromagnetic emission at plasma frequency.
Density gradients lead to unstable plasma and wave generation.
Injected electron beams produce Langmuir oscillations and escaping radiation.
Abstract
1.5D Vlasov-Maxwell simulations are employed to model electromagnetic emission generation in a fully self-consistent plasma kinetic model for the first time in the solar physics context. The simulations mimic the plasma emission mechanism and Larmor drift instability in a plasma thread that connects the Sun to Earth with the spatial scales compressed appropriately. The effects of spatial density gradients on the generation of electromagnetic radiation are investigated. It is shown that 1.5D inhomogeneous plasma with a uniform background magnetic field directed transverse to the density gradient is aperiodically unstable to Larmor-drift instability. The latter results in a novel effect of generation of electromagnetic emission at plasma frequency. When density gradient is removed (i.e. when plasma becomes stable to Larmor-drift instability) and a density, super-thermal, hot beam is…
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