Abstract

The problem of random motion of harmonically trapped charged particles in a constant external magnetic field is studied. A generalized three-dimensional Langevin equation with a power-law memory kernel is used to model the interaction of Brownian particles with the complex structure of viscoelastic media (e.g., dusty plasmas). The influence of a fluctuating environment is modeled by an additive fractional Gaussian noise. In the long-time limit the exact expressions of the first-order and second-order moments of the fluctuating position for the Brownian particle subjected to an external periodic force in the plane perpendicular to the magnetic field have been calculated. Also, the particle's angular momentum is found. It is shown that an interplay of external periodic forcing, memory, and colored noise can generate a variety of cooperation effects, such as memory-induced sign reversals of the angular momentum, multiresonance versus Larmor frequency, and memory-induced particle confinement in the absence of an external trapping field. Particularly in the case without external trapping, if the memory exponent is lower than a critical value, we find a resonancelike behavior of the anisotropy in the particle position distribution versus the driving frequency, implying that it can be efficiently excited by an oscillating electric field. Similarities and differences between the behaviors of the models with internal and external noises are also discussed.

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