Kinetic simulation of the electron-cyclotron maser instability: effect of a finite source size
A. A. Kuznetsov, V. G. Vlasov

TL;DR
This paper presents a kinetic simulation of the electron-cyclotron maser instability considering finite source size, revealing how source dimensions influence emission efficiency and electron distribution, with applications to planetary and stellar radio sources.
Contribution
The study introduces a comprehensive kinetic model that accounts for finite source size and particle flow, advancing understanding of radio emission processes in astrophysical magnetospheres.
Findings
Emission efficiency reaches 10-20% in larger sources.
Electron distributions can become nearly flat due to wave-particle interactions.
Model aligns well with observations of Earth's and Saturn's auroral radio emissions.
Abstract
The electron-cyclotron maser instability is widespread in the Universe, producing, e.g., radio emission of the magnetized planets and cool substellar objects. Diagnosing the parameters of astrophysical radio sources requires comprehensive nonlinear simulations of the radiation process. We simulate the electron-cyclotron maser instability in a very low-beta plasma. The model used takes into account the radiation escape from the source region and the particle flow through this region. We developed a kinetic code to simulate the time evolution of an electron distribution in a radio emission source. The model includes the terms describing the particle injection to and escape from the emission source region. The spatial escape of the emission from the source is taken into account by using a finite amplification time. The unstable electron distribution of the horseshoe type is considered. A…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIonosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Magnetic confinement fusion research · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
