Two-fluid Modeling of Acoustic Wave Propagation in Gravitationally Stratified Isothermal Media
Fan Zhang, Stefaan Poedts, Andrea Lani, B{\l}a\.zej Ku\'zma, and Kris Murawski

TL;DR
This study employs a two-fluid model to simulate acoustic wave propagation in stratified, partially ionized plasmas, revealing how ionization, recombination, and collisional effects influence plasma heating and energy dissipation.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed two-fluid simulation framework that incorporates ion-neutral interactions, ionization, and recombination to better understand wave-induced heating in plasmas.
Findings
Ionization enhances plasma heating efficiency.
Decoupling between ions and neutrals increases with ionization.
Ionization and recombination significantly affect energy dissipation.
Abstract
To study acoustic wave propagation and the corresponding energy deposition in partially ionized plasmas, we use a two-fluid computational model that treats neutrals and charged particles (electrons and ions) as two separate fluids. This two-fluid model takes into account the ion-neutral collisions, ionization, and recombination, allowing us to investigate both the collisional and reactive interactions between uncoupled ions and neutrals in the plasmas. In the present numerical simulations, the initial density is specified to reach hydrostatic equilibrium, and as a comparison, chemical equilibrium is also taken into account to provide a density profile that differs from typical hydrostatic equilibrium profiles. External velocity drivers are then imposed to generate monochromatic acoustic waves. As is well known, the upward propagating acoustic waves steepen in gravitationally stratified…
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