Temperature Relaxation Rates in Strongly Magnetized Plasmas
Louis Jose, James C. Welch III, Timothy D. Tharp, Scott D. Baalrud

TL;DR
This paper investigates how strong magnetic fields influence temperature relaxation rates in plasmas, revealing that magnetization can significantly alter energy exchange dynamics between electrons and ions.
Contribution
It extends previous models by analyzing temperature evolution in strongly magnetized plasmas with both electrons and ions, across a wide range of magnetic field strengths.
Findings
Electron perpendicular energy exchange is suppressed when electrons are strongly magnetized.
Ion energy exchange rates increase with magnetization, affecting temperature equilibration.
Electron parallel temperature rapidly aligns with ion temperature under strong magnetization.
Abstract
Strongly magnetized plasmas, characterized by having a gyrofrequency larger than the plasma frequency (), are known to exhibit novel transport properties. Previous works studying pure electron plasmas have shown that strong magnetization significantly inhibits energy exchange between parallel and perpendicular directions, leading to a prolonged time for relaxation of a temperature anisotropy. Recent work studying repulsive electron-ion interactions showed that strong magnetization increases both the parallel and perpendicular temperature relaxation rates of ions, but in differing magnitudes, resulting in the formation of temperature anisotropy during equilibration. This previous study treated electrons as a heat bath and assumed weak magnetization of ions. Here, we broaden this analysis and compute the full temperature and temperature anisotropy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Magnetic confinement fusion research
