Abstract

Anomalous resistivity caused by lower hybrid drift instabilities (LHDIs) has been extensively studied in the literature, and has been invoked to explain the rates of magnetic diffusion and plasma profile evolution in the low-density plasma periphery of theta and screw pinch plasmas. This article presents a fully kinetic simulation study of LHDIs with a realistic mass ratio using the particle-in-cell code Chicago over a large range of drift speeds, 0.5<vdi2/vti2<14.5, plasma β, β≥2×10−5, and temperature ratios, 0.1<Te/Ti<10. The resistivity quantified from the simulations is compared with the analytic estimates from the literature and a generalized resistivity expression is presented, which can be applied over the entire range of plasma environments that were simulated in this study. This expression uses the amplitude of the LHDI fluctuations resulting from instability saturation by electron resonance broadening rather than plateau formation, current relaxation, or ion trapping. The generalized resistivity expression is appropriate for full-scale fluid simulations that encounter a large range of plasma conditions, and has better agreement with the resistivity quantified from kinetic simulations than previous expressions in the literature, particularly at low plasma β. Anomalous resistivity has also been considered as an explanation of the rapid magnetic field dissipation during magnetic reconnection events at large plasma β. At a large β, the magnetic field fluctuations of LHDIs can dominate the electrostatic fluctuations and this article investigates enhanced collisionality due to the nonlinear magnetic force, δJ×δB/c.

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