Electron pairing in mirror modes: Surpassing the quasilinear limit
R. A. Treumann, W. Baumjohann

TL;DR
This paper reveals a novel process where electron pairing in mirror modes surpasses the quasilinear stability limit, leading to enhanced plasma growth and localized diamagnetism, with potential for experimental verification.
Contribution
It introduces a new mechanism of electron pairing in mirror modes that breaks the quasilinear limit and influences plasma stability and magnetic properties.
Findings
Electron pairs form near bounce-mirror points in mirror modes.
Pairing breaks the quasilinear stability limit, causing further growth.
The process can be experimentally verified and affects plasma diamagnetism.
Abstract
The mirror mode evolving in collisionless magnetised high-temperature thermally anisotropic plasmas is shown to develop an interesting macro-state. Starting as a classical zero frequency ion fluid instability it saturates quasi-linearly at very low magnetic level, while forming elongated magnetic bubbles which trap the electron component to perform an adiabatic bounce motion along the magnetic field. {Further evolution of the mirror mode towards a stationary state is determined by the bouncing trapped electrons which interact with the thermal level of ion sound waves, generate attractive wake potentials which give rise to formation of electron pairs in the lowest-energy singlet state of two combined electrons. Pairing takes preferentially place near the bounce-mirror points where the pairs become spatially locked with all their energy in the gyration. The resulting large anisotropy of…
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