Abstract

This paper is concerned with the large-time behavior of solutions to the Cauchy problem on the two-fluid Euler–Maxwell system with dissipation when initial data are around a constant equilibrium state. The main goal is the rigorous justification of diffusion phenomena in fluid plasma at the linear level. Precisely, motivated by the classical Darcy's law for the nonconductive fluid, we first give a heuristic derivation of the asymptotic equations of the Euler–Maxwell system in large time. It turns out that both the density and the magnetic field tend time-asymptotically to the diffusion equations with diffusive coefficients explicitly determined by given physical parameters. Then, in terms of the Fourier energy method, we analyze the linear dissipative structure of the system, which implies the almost exponential time-decay property of solutions over the high-frequency domain. The key part of the paper is the spectral analysis of the linearized system, exactly capturing the diffusive feature of solutions over the low-frequency domain. Finally, under some conditions on initial data, we show the convergence of the densities and the magnetic field to the corresponding linear diffusion waves with the rate [Formula: see text] in L2-norm and also the convergence of the velocities and the electric field to the corresponding asymptotic profiles given in the sense of the generalized Darcy's law with the faster rate [Formula: see text] in L2-norm. Thus, this work can be also regarded as the mathematical proof of the Darcy's law in the context of collisional fluid plasma.

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