Abstract
A sounding rocket experiment involving the injection of a barium gas jet in the upper ionosphere provided an opportunity of investigating quantitatively several aspects of the beam-plasma interaction that is the substance of Alfven’s critical velocity effect. Whereas the experimental data are presented elsewhere, this paper contains some theoretical considerations of (1) the limiting neutral density for which the ionization process can operate, (2) the interaction of the freshly injected ions with the background plasma, and (3) the microprocess which leads to collisionless electron tail formation. The observed distribution of injected ions is consistent with the Townsend condition on the beam-plasma discharge. The mass loading on the ambient plasma, although locally high, has a weak effect on the dynamics of the involved flux-tube because of the limited extent of the beam. The most likely process by which energy is transferred from the freshly generated ions to the electrons is an ion beam instability leading to the excitation of lower hybrid waves
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