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The Magnetized Vlasov-Amp\`ere system and the Bernstein-Landau paradox

Authors :
Charles, Frédérique
Després, Bruno
Rege, Alexandre
Weder, Ricardo
Source :
Journal of Statistical Physics volume 183 article 23 (2021) 57 pp
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

We study the Bernstein-Landau paradox in the collisionless motion of an electrostatic plasma in the presence of a constant external magnetic field. The Bernstein-Landau paradox consists in that in the presence of the magnetic field, the electric field and the charge density fluctuation have an oscillatory behavior in time. This is radically different from Landau damping, in the case without magnetic field, where the electric field tends to zero for large times. We consider this problem from a new point of view. Instead of analyzing the linear magnetized Vlasov-Poisson system, as it is usually done, we study the linear magnetized Vlasov-Amp\`ere system. We formulate the magnetized Vlasov-Amp\`ere system as a Schr\"odinger equation with a selfadjoint magnetized Vlasov-Amp\`ere operator in the Hilbert space of states with finite energy. The magnetized Vlasov-Amp\`ere operator has a complete set of orthonormal eigenfunctions, that include the Bernstein modes. The expansion of the solution of the magnetized Vlasov-Amp\`ere system in the eigenfunctions shows the oscillatory behavior in time. We prove the convergence of the expansion under optimal conditions, assuming only that the initial state has finite energy. This solves a problem that was recently posed in the literature. The Bernstein modes are not complete. To have a complete system it is necessary to add eigenfunctions that are associated with eigenvalues at all the integer multiples of the cyclotron frequency. These special plasma oscillations actually exist on their own, without the excitation of the other modes. In the limit when the magnetic fields goes to zero the spectrum of the magnetized Vlasov-Amp\`ere operator changes drastically from pure point to absolutely continuous in the orthogonal complement to its kernel, due to a sharp change on its domain. This explains the Bernstein-Landau paradox.<br />Comment: We have edited the paper to include new results and to add details that improve the presentation. Further, we have added the word magnetized to the title

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Journal of Statistical Physics volume 183 article 23 (2021) 57 pp
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2002.11380
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10955-021-02755-9