Thermal disequilibration of ions and electrons by collisionless plasma turbulence
Yohei Kawazura, Michael Barnes, and Alexander A. Schekochihin

TL;DR
This study investigates how collisionless plasma turbulence causes ions and electrons to reach different temperatures, with the temperature ratio depending on plasma beta, revealing a fundamental nonequilibrium state in astrophysical plasmas.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed numerical analysis of ion-electron temperature disequilibration driven by Alfvénic turbulence in collisionless plasmas, highlighting the dependence on plasma beta.
Findings
Ion-electron heating ratio increases with plasma beta.
High beta plasmas have hotter ions; low beta have hotter electrons.
Distinct phase mixing mechanisms dominate at different beta regimes.
Abstract
Does overall thermal equilibrium exist between ions and electrons in a weakly collisional, magnetised, turbulent plasma---and, if not, how is thermal energy partitioned between ions and electrons? This is a fundamental question in plasma physics, the answer to which is also crucial for predicting the properties of far-distant astronomical objects such as accretion discs around black holes. In the context of discs, this question was posed nearly two decades ago and has since generated a sizeable literature. Here we provide the answer for the case in which energy is injected into the plasma via Alfv\'enic turbulence: collisionless turbulent heating typically acts to disequilibrate the ion and electron temperatures. Numerical simulations using a hybrid fluid-gyrokinetic model indicate that the ion-electron heating-rate ratio is an increasing function of the thermal-to-magnetic energy…
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