Abstract

As Langmuir waves (LWs) are driven to large amplitude in plasma, they are affected by nonlinear mechanisms. A global understanding, based on simulations and experiments, has emerged that identifies various nonlinear regimes depending on the dimensionless parameter kλD, where k is the Langmuir wave number and λD is the electron Debye length. The nonlinear phenomena arise due to wave-wave and wave-particle coupling mechanisms, and this basic separation between fluid-like nonlinearities and kinetic nonlinearities depends on the degree to which electron and ion Landau damping, as well as electron trapping, play a role. Previous ionospheric heating experiments [Cheung et al. Phys. Plasmas 8, 802 (2001)] identified cavitation/collapse and Langmuir decay instability (LDI), predominantly wave-wave mechanisms, to be the principal nonlinear effects for driven LWs with kλD<0.1, in agreement with fluid simulations [DuBois et al. Phys. Plasmas 8, 791 (2001)]. In the present research, collective Thomson scattering measurements of LWs driven by stimulated Raman scattering in laser-plasma experiments are used to study both wave-wave and wave-particle nonlinearities [Kline et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 94, 175003 (2005)]. For kλD<0.29, multiple LWs are detected and are attributed to LDI, a wave-wave nonlinear regime. For kλD>0.29, a single-wave, frequency-broadened spectrum is observed associated with electron trapping, a wave-particle nonlinear regime. The transition from wave-wave to wave-particle nonlinear behavior is qualitatively consistent with particle-in-cell simulations and with the crossing of the LDI threshold above that for LW self-focusing. The fact that LDI is observed in both ionospheric and laser-plasma experiments for similar values of kλD, though vastly differing in plasma conditions and scales, and that simulations predict the various observed nonlinear regimes over a large range of kλD, supports our global view of LW nonlinear behavior.

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