Abstract

The collision of two plasma clouds at a speed that exceeds the ion acoustic speed can result in the formation of shocks. This phenomenon is observed not only in astrophysical scenarios, such as the propagation of supernova remnant (SNR) blast shells into the interstellar medium, but also in laboratory-based laser-plasma experiments. These experiments and supporting simulations are thus seen as an attractive platform for small-scale reproduction and study of astrophysical shocks in the laboratory. We model two plasma clouds, which consist of electrons and ions, with a 2D particle-in-cell simulation. The ion temperatures of both clouds differ by a factor of ten. Both clouds collide at a speed that is realistic for laboratory studies and for SNR shocks in their late evolution phase, like that of RCW86. A magnetic field, which is orthogonal to the simulation plane, has a strength that is comparable to that of SNR shocks. A forward shock forms between the overlap layer of both plasma clouds and the cloud with cooler ions. A large-amplitude ion acoustic wave is observed between the overlap layer and the cloud with hotter ions. It does not steepen into a reverse shock because its speed is below the ion acoustic speed. A gradient of the magnetic field amplitude builds up close to the forward shock as it compresses the magnetic field. This gradient gives rise to an electron drift that is fast enough to trigger an instability. Electrostatic ion acoustic wave turbulence develops ahead of the shock, widens its transition layer, and thermalizes the ions, but the forward shock remains intact.

Highlights

  • The collision between two plasma clouds may trigger the creation of shock waves, if the relative velocity between the two plasmas exceeds the ion-acoustic speed at the point of collision

  • This scenario is of particular relevance in astrophysics, since it occurs during the propagation of supernova remnants (SNR) in space

  • We have modeled with a PIC simulation the collision of two plasma clouds, which have consisted of electrons and ions with a charge-to-mass ratio that corresponds to fully ionized atoms with equal numbers of protons and neutrons

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The collision between two plasma clouds may trigger the creation of shock waves, if the relative velocity between the two plasmas exceeds the ion-acoustic speed at the point of collision. A reverse shock, which moves towards the target, is likely to form if the difference between the mean speed of the downstream region and that of the successive rarefaction wave, which corresponds to the laser-ablated plasma, exceeds the sound speed. This process has been observed experimentally [16]. [34] that the electrostatic shocks, which are characterized by a planar electric field pulse with a thickness that is comparable to an electron skin depth, are transient structures Such shocks are frequently observed in laboratory plasma.

The particle-in-cell method
The initial conditions of the simulation
The shock model
The simulation
Time 53
Time 106
Time 491
Findings
Summary
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call