Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well...

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Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process
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Transcript of Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well...

Page 1: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Mode-Mode Resonance

A linear-nonlinear process

Page 2: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Simple Beam Instability

• Let us consider

• It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

• What is the cause of instability?

2 2

220 0

1 0pe pebn

n kv

Page 3: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

One may rewrite the equation

It indicates that Langmuir wave is coupled to a beam mode.

2 2

220 0

1 0pe pebn

n kv

22 2 2 20

0

bpe pe

nkv

n

Page 4: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Consequences depending on nature of coupling

• Propagation and evanescence

• Convective instability

• Absolute instability

Page 5: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Mode Evanescence and Instability

• Evanescence

• Instability

2 20pe kv

2 20pe kv

Page 6: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Graphical Description

Complex root

Beam mode

Page 7: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Stability and propagation

Page 8: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Stability and blocking

Page 9: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Convective Instability

Page 10: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Convective Instability

• The frequency is complex in certain range of k so that the system is unstable.

• The roots of the unstable roots are in the same half plane of k.

The instability is convective.

Page 11: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Absolute Instability

Page 12: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Absolute Instability

• The frequency is complex in certain range of k so that the system is unstable.

• The roots of the unstable roots are in opposite half planes of k.

Thus the instability is absolute.

Page 13: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Two Other Electron Beam Instabilities

• Beam mode coupled with right-hand polarized ion cyclotron wave

• Beam mode couple with left-hand polarized ion cyclotron wave

Page 14: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Ion cyclotron-beam instability

• The dispersion relation is

• Coupling of beam-cyclotron mode and the electromagnetic ion cyclotron mode leads to two different instabilities

2 2

2 2 2

0

pi be pe

i i

nk c kV kV

n

Page 15: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Two electron cyclotron-beam modes

• Left-hand polarized

• Right-hand polarized

0ekV

0ekV

Page 16: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Right-hand polarized beam mode

Page 17: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Absolute Instability

Page 18: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Left-hand polarized beam mode

Page 19: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Convective Instability

Page 20: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

The two beam instabilities

• Have fundamentally different properties.

• The right-hand mode is absolutely unstable.

• The left-hand mode is convectively unstable

Page 21: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Modified Two Stream Instability

• The instability is related to shock wave study in the early 1970s.

• The instability theory is rather simple and the physics is fairly interesting.

• From the viewpoint of mode-coupling process it is obvious.

Page 22: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Dispersion Relation

• Consider electrostatic waves in a magnetized plasma

• Consider and obtain

2 2 2 2 2

2 2 2 20

cos sin1

( )pe pe pi

e k v

2cos /e pm m

2 2 2pe pe

Page 23: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Instability and Growth Rate

• Thus we obtain

2 2 2

2 2 20( )

pi pe e pi

UH p UH

m

k v m

0k UH kv

Page 24: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.
Page 25: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Mode Coupling and Modulation

• This is another important process in plasma physics.

• It is relevant to parametric excitation of waves.

Page 26: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

An Oscillator with Modulation

• The equation that describes the motion is

• The modulation frequency is

201 2 cos 0X t X

0

Page 27: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Physical Parameters

• Natural frequency

• Pump or modulation frequency

• Modulation amplitude

• Oscillator with modulation

0

01 cos t

Page 28: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Fourier transform leads to• Two coupled oscillators if

where only terms close to the natural frequency are retained. Eventually we obtain the following dispersion equation

2 2 20

2 2 21

( ) ( )

( ) ( )

X X

X X

22 2 2 2 40

0 2

Page 29: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Two Cases of Interest

0

0

( ) 2

( )

a

b

Page 30: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

22 2 2 2 40

2 40 0

0 2

2 4

2

4

Page 31: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Dispersion Equation• Eliminating X and Y we obtain the

dispersion equation

• Two cases of interest

1 2 0 2 0

21 2 0 2 0 2 0

( ) ( ) ( )

( ) ( )

D D D

Z D D

1 2 0( ) ( ) 0, ( ) 0a D D

1 0 2 0( ) ( ) 0, ( ) 0b D D

Page 32: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Further Discussion

Will be given later when we consider parametric instabilities. The details are similar to those discussed earlier.

Page 33: Mode-Mode Resonance A linear-nonlinear process. Simple Beam Instability Let us consider It is well known that the equation supports reactive instability.

Summary and Conclusions

• Mode coupling in general plays important roles.

• It can lead to reactive instabilities such as various types of beam instabilities.

• The coupled oscillator problem is an introduction of the theory of parametric instability.