bg – ursi school and workshop on waves and turbulence phenomena in space plasmas kiten, july 2006...

54
BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent magnetic fields Madalina Vlad National Institute of Laser, Plasmas and Radiation Physics, P. O. Box MG-36, Magurele, Bucharest, Romania [email protected] .

Upload: christine-west

Post on 30-Dec-2015

219 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

BG – URSI School and Workshop on

Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas

Kiten, July 2006

Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in

turbulent magnetic fields

Madalina Vlad

National Institute of Laser, Plasmas and Radiation Physics,

P. O. Box MG-36, Magurele, Bucharest, Romania

[email protected]

.

Page 2: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Outline• The transport of charge particles in stochastic magnetic field: an important problem in

many astrophysical issues (cosmic rays in heliosphere, galactic cosmic rays, Fermi acceleration process, …). Quasiliniar theory is used in these studies, or phenomenological models (Bohm diffusion coef.)

• We have developed a semi-analytical approach that applies to the nonlinear case. • The results are unexpected and rather non-trivial in many situations:

- The diffusion coefficients are completely different of those obtained in quasilinear conditions. - The dependence on the specific parameters is reversed.

• We have concentrated on laboratory magnetized plasmas (fusion experiments): - transport induced by the ExB stochastic drift (including effects of collisions, average flows, parallel

motion,…)- Transport in magnetic turbulence and influence of collisions- Lorentz transport for arbitrary Larmor radius and cyclotron frequency.

• Parameters are completely different in fusion plasmas but, since the transport process depends on dimensionless numbers, some of the results are directly relevant for space plasmas. Certaily, the methods we have developed can be extended to specific particle transport problems in space plasmas.

AimTo present the statistical method and some results on charged particle transport

in magnetic turbulence

Page 3: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Content

1) Introduction- Diffusion by continuous movements- Special case of 2-dimensional divergence free velocity fields

2) Statistical methods

3) Diffusion of magnetic lines and structures formation

4) Particle diffusion and effects of perturbations

5) Larmor radius effects

6) Conclusions

Page 4: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

1) Diffusion by continuous movements (generalization of the Brownian diffusion)

Non-linear stochastic equation:

where is a continuous field in each realization. It is statistically described as a stationary and homogeneous stochastic velocity field with Gaussian distribution and known Eulerian correlation (EC):

0)0();),(()(

xttxvdt

txd

),( txv

ccjiij

txfVttxxvtxvtxE

,),(),(),( 2

1111

V

VK c

flfl

c

c

c

,

V the amplitude , the correlation length, the correlation time

The Kubo number :

cc

Kubo number describes the decorrelation due to time variation of the stochastic field.

Similar dimensionless quatities are defined for other decorrelation mechanisms (collisions, average velocity, etc.)

Page 5: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

To determine: The statistical properties of the trajectories, MSD, D(t), probability.

)(lim,)(

2

1)(,)(

2

2 tDDdt

txdtDtx

t

• A deterministic equation for each realisation of v(x,t) having a smooth, unique solution x(t)

)),(()0,0()( ttxvvtL jiij

0

0

')'(,')'()( dttLDdttLtD xx

t

xxx ,')'('2)(0

2 t

xx dttLtttx

Lagrangian velocity correlation (LVC) :

• Taylor has shown that:

for integrable LVC, the process is diffusive at large time

superdiffusive (non-integrable LVC) or subdiffusive (LVC with zero integral) transport

in all cases, there is a ballistic regime at small time,

)(lim,2)(: 2 tDDDttxtfor

,1,)(: 2 ttxtfor

tVtDtVtxtfor c2222 )(,)(:

Page 6: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

222 /, KVD cccqlc • K<<1, quasilinear regime (fast variation of the stochastic field )

flc

cfl • K>>1, nonlinear regime (slow time variation ) KVVD cccflBfl /, 22 (Bohm diffusion coefficient)

EC LVCE(x,t) L(t)

2V 2V

x t

E(x,t)

c

- Universal scalings, EC function determines only numbers;- Gaussian distribution of the trajectories;- short time memory and coherence.

,')'()( 2

0

VdttLtDt

xx

Page 7: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

ANOMALY: Two-dimensional divergence-free stochastic velocity fields (magnetized plasma (magnetic turbulence, ExB stochastic drift), incompressible fluid turbulence, etc.)

),,),(12

txxx

txV

At K > 1 :

Direct numerical simulations show trajectory trapping (eddying)Stochastic potential : ), tx

0),( txV

• K=10• K=1

Page 8: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

• K=10• K=1

The trapping appears at K > 1 • is generic (each trajectory is a sequence of trapping events and long jumps) • is coherent (neighboring trajectories are all trapped)

Trapping strongly influences • particle transport the nonlinear regime is completely different of the Bohm diffusion

• statistical properties of the particles non-Gaussian trajectory distributions with

tails, memory effects and high degree of coherence in the stochastic motion

Page 9: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

:, cK Permanent trapping - all trajectories wind on the contour lines of ;Subdiffusive behaviour.

:,1 flcK Temporary trapping on the contour lines of ;

1K 01KJ.-D. Reuss, J. H. Misguich, Phys. Rev. E 54, 1857 (1996).

Page 10: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

A typical trajectory for large K

Trapping event

Long jump

a)

b)

The two segments a), b) correspond to the same time interval

Page 11: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

)),( ttx )),( ttx

)(tx 2)0()( xtx

Properties of the trajectories:

- long jumps when the particle is at

- trapping on the contour lines with large

0)),( ttx

)),( ttx

Page 12: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Content

1) Introduction- Diffusion by continuous movements- Special case of 2-dimensional divergence free velocity fields

2) Statistical methods - Existing methods and their problems - New approach: nested subensemble method, decorrelation trajectory method

3) Diffusion of magnetic lines and structures formation

4) Particle diffusion and effects of perturbations

5) Larmor radius effects

6) Conclusions

Page 13: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

2) Statistical methods

We have to determine the LVC knowing the EC of the stochastic field

Average of a stochastic function of a stochastic argument:

Test particle methods or methods for the passively advected density:• Corrsin approximation and its developments • Direct interaction approximation• Renormalization group technique• Estimation based on percolation in stochastic landscapes

)),(()0,0()( ttxvvtL jiij

Page 14: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

)(),()0,0()),(()0,0()( txxtxvvxdttxvvtL jijiij

Corrsin approximation :•(1) Gaussian statistics of the trajectories;•(2) factorization of the average (equivalent with performing first the average over the stochastic field at fixed position (Eulerian) and then the average over trajectories).

),(),()(),()0,0()( txPtxExdtxxtxvvxdtL ijjiij

Bohm diffusion coefficient at large K and diffusion in frozen turbulence

Assumption (2) can be eliminated Additional nonlinear terms appear in L(t) depending on ;they are determined by integrating some half-Lagrangian correlations . A closed system of equations is obtained.

),()( txvtx ji

),()),(( yvttxv ji

Bohm diffusion coefficient at large K and diffusion in frozen turbulence

Thus this method fails because it is based on (1).

Assumption (1) can be improved by taking cumulants of 4th order Bohm diffusion coefficient at large K and diffusion in frozen turbulence Thus the trajectories are strongly non-Gaussian

Page 15: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Essential conditions for statistical methods that can describe this special case are:

• to maintain the statistical consequences of the invariance of the potential

• not to rely on the Gaussian assumption for the trajectories.

The trapping process is strongly connected to the invariance of the potential• static case: invariance of the potential and permanent trapping on the contour lines;• slowly varying potential (K>1): approx. invariance of the potential and temporary trapping

t

ttx

t

ttx

x

ttxttxv

dt

ttxd

ii

)),(()),(()),(()),((

)),((

This represents a very strong constraint for the statistical methods.

),,),(12

txxx

txv

Page 16: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

The subensembles (S) : 0)0,0( vv

,)0,0( 0

Sjiij ttxvvvPvddtL )),((),()( 00000

The LVC is the sum of the contributions of each subensemble (S):

SjiSji ttxvvttxvv )),(()),(()0,0( 0

The invariance property of the Lagrangian potential

The LVC (2-point average) the average Lagrangian velocity (1-point average)

The average Lagrangian potential in (S) can be determined

for frozen turbulence

,)0())0(())(( 0 xtx

Stx ))((

THE DECORRELATION TRAJECTORY METHOD (DTM)

Page 17: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Statistical properties of the Eulerien potential and velocity fields in (S): they are non-stationary and non-homogeneous Gaussian fields, having space-time dependent averages :

2020 //),(),( aEVEvtxtx iiS

S

2020 //),(),( aEVEvtxVtxv jijiS

jSj

0)0,0( S 0),( txS and as ,x

t

0)0,0( vV S 0),( txV S

and as ,x

t

),()0,0(),(,),()0,0(),(,),()0,0(),( txvtxEtxvvtxEtxtxE iijiij

are determined by the EC of the potential as: .,,21

2

1222

2

11 etcExx

EEx

E

),(,),(12

txxx

txV SS

Zero-divergence average velocity in (S)

These subensemble (conditional) averages describe the structure of the correlated zone

ijE

Page 18: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

The average Lagrangian velocity in (S)

• Aim: to find an approximation compatible to the invariance of the average Lagrangian potential in (S): (Corrsin approx. in (S) determines an average Lagrangian potential which decays to 0)

)];([);(

)();(

StXVdt

StXd

txStXS

S

tx ))((

));(())(( StXVtxv S

S

The approximation of the decorrelation trajectory method: the fluctuations of the trajectories in (S) are neglected

),(),12

XVXXXdt

Xd SS

An equation is obtained for the average trajectory in (S) (the decorrelation trajectory), which is of Hamiltonian type:

0);0( SX

Page 19: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

The LVC and the diffusion coefficientSjiij ttxvvvPvddtL )),((),()( 00000

RESULTS ( isotropic turbulence, factorized EC , ):

)()(')( 2 thtKFVtL ijij

)()(2

tKFKtDc

),(12

exp2

1)(

0 0

22

3 puXpu

ududpF

The function F is :

,/, 00 upvu

t

thdtt0

)'(')(is the decorrelation trajectory in (S) along for the static turbulence

),( puX 0v

h(t) - the time-dependence of the EC of the potential; - describes the decorrelation due to the time variation ofF(t) - determined by the nonlinearity (by the space-dependece ) - describes the trapping in the structure of the stochastic field

)(x

), tx

D(t) results from a competition between trapping and release of the trajectories:

)()(),( thxtxE

Page 20: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

- Thus, the decorrelation trajectory method relies on a set of simple, smooth trajectories that are determined from the Eulerian correlation of the stochastic potential. The LVC is determined as a weighted average of these trajectories, with the weighting factor determined analytically. The trajectories are usually determined numerically (calculations of the order of 10s for this case)

-The decorrelation trajectory method is the first order of a systematic expansion, the nested subensemble method (NSM).

The idea is to determine averages not on the whole set of trajectories but to group together trajectories that are similar, to average on them and then to perform averages of these averages. Similar trajectories are obtained by imposing suplementary initial conditions besides x(0)=0.

Page 21: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

The subensembles (S1) :0)0,0( vv

,)0,0( 0

THE NESTED SUBENSEMBLE METHOD (NSM)Space of realization (R) = Σ subensembles (S1),

Subensemble (S1) = Σ subensembles (S2), …

The subensembles (S2) : , …. (Sn) 0

2 )0,0(ij

ji xx

• LVC in (S2):

• LVC in (S1):

• LVC in (R):

)2;()),(()),(()0,0( 0

2

0

2StVvttxvvttxvv L

jiSjiSji

)2;()2()),(( 022

012

011

0

1

0 StVSPdddvttxvv LjiSji

)1;()()( 000 StVvSPvddtL Ljiij

)2(),1( SPSP are the probabilities that a realization belongs to (S1) or (S2)

- Systematic expansion based on similarities of the trajectories: inner subensembles in this nested classification contain more similar trajectories. In the limit of large n the trajectories in a (Sn) are almost identical.

Page 22: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Approximation in NSM : neglect the fluctuations of the trajectories in (S2)

Similarity of the trajectories in (S2) [the potential value determines an average size; trajectories are strongly super-determined: 6 supplementary initial conditions contained in the definitions of (S2) and (S1)]

)2);2;(())2;(())(()2;(22

SStXVStXvtxvStV E

SS

L

)2;( StX

is the average trajectory in (S2); It is the solution of the Hamiltonian system:

),2;,)2;(12

SXXX

SXVdt

Xd EE

0)2;0( SX

The Eulerian subensemble averages of the velocity are analytically determined. They are functions of the parameters of (S1), (S2) and of the EC.

)2;),2;( SXSXV EE

Trajectory statistics in (S) is obtained by averages of X(t;S2) with determined weighting factors.

Trajectory statistics in (R) is obtained by averages of X(t;S1) with determined weighting factors.

Page 23: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

• Thus, the nested subensemble method (NSM) is a semi-analytical approach based on a set of deterministic trajectories, X(t;S2). They are smooth trajectories determined from the EC of the potential. • NSM fulfils all the statistical constraints determined by the invariance of the Lagrangian potential provides a good statistical description of trapping• NSM appears to have a fast convergence: the decorrelation trajectory method (DTM), based only on (S1) yields close results for D(t)

• NSM provides much more statistical information: the distribution of trajectories and of the distance between neighboring trajectories in the whole set of realizations R and also in each subensemble (S1)

Page 24: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Content

1) Introduction- Diffusion by continuous movements- Special case of 2-dimensional divergence free velocity fields

2) Statistical methods

3) Diffusion of magnetic lines and magnetic structure formation

4) Particle diffusion and effects of perturbations

5) Larmor radius effects

6) Conclusions

Page 25: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

3) Diffusion of magnetic lines and magnetic structure formation

zezxB

zxB

dz

txd

),(),()(

0

IIc

zxfVzzxxzxtxE

,),(),(),( 2

1111

VL

L

VK cII

c

II

,

V the amplitude , the correlation length, the parallel correlation length

The magnetic Kubo number :

IIc

where L is the parallel length necessary for which the magnetic line performs a perpendicular displacement of (the equivalent of the time of flight)

The magnetic Kubo number describes the decorrelation due to the variation along z of the stochastic field. If it is not dependent on z, K is infinite, the potential is conserved and the magnetic line spreading must be subdiffusive.

z

x

y

0B B

Page 26: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Average trajectories in the subensembles (S2)

- closed paths (trapped trajectories) - small sizes and periods

- some open paths (free trajectories)

- larger sizes and periods

0Large 00

),2;,12

SXXXdt

Xd E

Page 27: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Statistics of magnetic lines in the subensembles (S)

Average trajectory in (S) : )2;()2();( 022

012

011 StXSPdddStX

0Large

)();(,0);( 21 SStXStX

00 Path along initial velocity with continuous time increase

*

*DTM

NSM

Completely different results obtained with NSM and DTM trajectory fluctuations in (S)

are not negligible but the mixing process is well described in both cases

size of the structure

Page 28: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Magnetic line statistics in the presence of trapping for z-independent fluctuations Magnetic line fluctuations in (S1): dispersion and average

)1;()2;()2()1;( 22022

012

011 StXStXSPdddStd iii

Saturation in a timeat finite size

)1(Ss

0Large 00

Continuous increase (slower than linear)

Page 29: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Magnetic line probability function (pdf) in (S1):

)2;()2();,( 022

012

011 StXxSPdddStxP

Pdf far from Gaussian in both cases

* Saturation and localization * Continuously expanding part(with a velocity > average velocity)

Page 30: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Statistics of the distance between neighboring magnetic lines in (S1):0)0('),()('

xtxtx

St)(2

1

St)(2

2);(1 Std

);(2 Std

Very strong anomalous clump effect

sflcl S 10100)( Richardson law for small time and later slower increase as

Absence of the clump effect

Anomalous clump effect (usually trajectory clumps have a life time of the order of the flight time)

3t

5.1t

3t

Richardson law for the dispersion perpendicular tothe average velocity in (S) and ballistic for the other

st 5.1t

Page 31: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

pdf of the distance between neighboring field lines in (S):

* Saturation and localization* Continuously expanding part(with a velocity > average velocity)similar with the pdf of the trajectories

Page 32: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Thus magnetic line structures

are generating in 2-d magnetic turbulence in magnetized plasmas.

They are similar with fluid vortices and represent solenoidal or eddying regions.Their statistical characteristics

(formation ‘time’ , size and dispersion ) are determined as function of the parameters of the subensemble (S1)

A very strong anomalous clump effect characterizes the relative distance between magnetic lines in such structures.

The evolution of magnetic lines in the structures is quasi-coherent.

For z-independent magnetic fluctuations, the size of the structures increase as decreases and go to infinity when .

For z-dependent magnetic fluctuations, structures appear if K>1 and their maximum size depends on K (increases with K).

)1(SL)1(Ss )1(Sdi

000

Page 33: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

The LVC and the running diffusion coefficient in (R)

• Long-time Lagrangian correlation build up in the structures; L(t) has long negative tail of power law type; positive and negative parts compensate.

Subdiffusive spreading of the magnetic lines for z-independent fluctuations

Memory and subdiffusion !

fl

c

t

xatxE

exp

2/1

1),(

22

BDD /

);()()( 101

00 StVvSPvddtL L

Subdiffusive transport

Page 34: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

The running diffusion coefficient in (R)

The nested subensemble method(NSM)

The decorrelation trajectory method(DTM)

• The results of the DTM concerning diffusion coefficients are validated ;

• The NSM appears as a fast convergent approach: second order is sufficient for determining the physically interesting statistical quantities.

Page 35: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Diffusive soreading of magnetic lines for z-dependent fluctuations

• frozen turbulence : subdiffusion (continuous lines - )

• time-dependent tubulence : diffusion(dashed lines - )

K

100K

Page 36: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

The quasi-linear regime K<1

1,

1,)(

KK

KKKF )38.0(10

KFDKD B)(

-2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 log(K)

0

-1

-2

BD

Dlog

11

)(2

KKD

c2

2

)( KKDc

Non-linear regime K>1 with structures

Diffusion in time-dependent stochastic potential

KVDc

c

cB

2

the Bohm diffusion coefficient

Page 37: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Content

1) Introduction- Diffusion by continuous movements- Special case of 2-dimensional divergence free velocity fields

2) Statistical methods

3) Diffusion of magnetic lines and structures formation

4) Particle diffusion and effects of perturbations

5) Larmor radius effects

6) Conclusions

Page 38: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

The z-independent magnetic fluctuations represent an unstable system: any weak perturbation has strong influence on the transport and anomalous regimes are obtained.

fl

BDD /

Particles with velocity v in turbulent magnetic field, with small Larmor radius are transported in the perpendicular direction with the magnetic line:

)()(),()( 2 tvDtDtLvtL pp

Page 39: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Effect of a perturbation = decorrelation mechanism characterized by a time d2V

t

fl

* The LVC is not influenced; Transport coefficient independent onand stable to such perturbations.

dfld

* The negative part of the LVC is cut out;

Anomalous diffusion regime (increased diffusion at stronger decorrelation)

Destruction of large structures with

Trajectory structure No trajectory structures and trapping

• Weak decorrelation mechanism with large decorrelation time

dwhenD

fl

• Strong decorrelation mechanism with small decorrelation timefld

dd VDwhenD 2,

dS

Page 40: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Effect of weak collisions

)(

2/,2/),,,()()(),,( 22

tdt

dz

Vtzxvtttzxbdt

xd

II

thIIII

zetzxtzxb

),,(),,(

Complex triple stochastic processe described by four dimensionless parameters:

II

mccIImII

IIII KK

VM ,,,

22

)(),()(),,( 2/12/1 tdt

dztttzxbM

dt

xdIIIIII

,),,(),,( 0 tzxbeBtzxB z

a supplementary stochastic function (multiplicative white noise)

Two types of trapping : • magnetic line trapping on the contour lines of the potential string-like segments of the magnetic lines;• parallel trapping of the particles due to collisions which force them to return along the magnetic lines.Two decorrelation mechanisms :• time variation of the stochastic magnetic field;• the perpendicular collisional velocity.

),,( tzxbK

dz

xdm

Page 41: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

cIIcII MDMD ,,,,,, int2

Effect of in the static case :

Minimum of the diffusion coeffcient(’'resonance’' condition)

A very small collisional perpendicular diffusion transforms the subdiffusive transport into a diffusive one with effective diffusion coefficient much larger than

Very strange regime with decreasing D,determined by the combined action of magnetic line trapping and parallel trapping

Page 42: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Thus

long time correlation of the Lagrangian velocity (memory effect)

appears in the magnetic lines for z-independent fluctuations.

Memory determines subdiffusive transport in static potential

and a class of anomalous diffusion regimes

in the presence of a decorrelation mechanism.

Decorrelation can be produced by - z component of the turbulent magnetic field (pitch angle scattering) - weak collisions - average velocity, etc.

Page 43: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Content

1) Introduction- Diffusion by continuous movements- Special case of 2-dimensional divergence free velocity fields

2) Statistical methods

3) Diffusion of magnetic lines and structures formation

4) Particle diffusion and effects of perturbations

5) Larmor radius effects

6) Conclusions

Page 44: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Large Larmor radius of impurity ions and of fusion particles

and

• the guiding center approximation is not adequate and Lorentz force has to be used for particle trajectories

Lorentz transport of test particles in turbulent plasmas

• large Larmor radius effects for ion and impurity transport;• effect of the turbulence on the fast fusion particle.

1c

1c

5) Larmor radius effects

• M. Vlad, F. Spineanu, ‘Larmor radius effects on impurity transport in turbulent plasmas’, Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion 47 (2005) 281.• M. Vlad, F. Spineanu, S.-I. Itoh, M. Yagi, K. Itoh , “Turbulent transport of the ions with large Larmor radii”, Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion 47 (2005) 1015.

Page 45: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

5) Larmor radius effects; Lorentz diffusion

Non-linear second order Langevin Equation:

zz ezxBzxBeBB

udt

xdBu

m

q

dt

txd

),(),,(

,,)(

0

2

2

.),/(

)()()(,/)()(

ctBmqB

ttxttut jiji

instantaneous Larmor radius: Guiding center position:

vdt

dz

tz

B

v

dt

td

tz

B

v

dt

td

jj

iji

jij

i

),,()(

),,()(

0

0

z

x

y

0B B

Page 46: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

jij

i

jij

i

H

dt

td

H

dt

td

)(

)( )(

2

1, 2

fl

H

Two coupled Hamiltonian systems with the same Hamiltonian function

Invariance property for static potential: energy is conserved

0

)(),(

dt

ttdH

?

• drift transport: invariance of the potential trajectory trapping

Does the invariance of the energy produce trapping in Lorentz transport?

Page 47: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Four dimensionless parameters for the Lorentz transport:

II

IIII

cfl vV

,cIIcV ,,,

The potential is a stochastic field(stationary, homogeneous, with zero average and Gaussian distribution)

vLL

Kc

II ,,

IIcc

ztxfttxxtxtxE

exp),(),(),( 2

1111

Given Eulerian correlation:

statistical description stochastic drift velocity

jiji x

txtxv

),(

),(

Parameters of the stochastic drift velocity:

Magnetic Kubo numberz-dependence of magnetic fluctuations

Normalized Larmor radius (rigidity) particle kinetic energy

Normalized cyclotron frequency

Page 48: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Lorentz transport & drift transport for z-independent magnetic fluctuationsStrong Larmor radius effects

The statistical evolution of the guiding centers is determined mainly by short coherent kicks with period T (the cyclotron motion brings back the particle in the correlated zone).

slower effective drift velocity and larger effective flight time

Subsiffusive transport with the same time decay due to trapping but with an amplification factor in the Lorentz case.

efft

Page 49: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Lorentz transport for z-dependent magnetic fluctuations :the asymptotic diffusion coefficient

Page 50: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

The asymptotic diffusion coefficient as function of the Larmor radius at fixed K:

maximum at ‘rezonance condition’ and decay as122 mKK

1K

10K

100K

),( KD

Page 51: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

1.2 Gyrokinetic approximation

Equivalent with ExB diffusion in the gyroaveraged Eulerian correlation of the potential

Page 52: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Dependence on Larmor radius in the quasilinear regime

Nonlinear process that determines the increase of and of . eff maxD

1

0

~)( D

D

KDDDKD B00

1 ,~),(

fleff 22

Bm

m

DKDD

K

2),(

2

max

2

1.3 Physical image of the amplified diffusion

Page 53: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Estimation of the maximum diffusion coefficient

2/,,2/~ 0DDVVDVV ceffeff OK

Bfleffeff DDV max2/~ wrong

Strong modification of the potential EC due to gyro-average:the effective correlation length is

B

fleffeff

eff

DD

V

max

22/

Page 54: BG – URSI School and Workshop on Waves and Turbulence Phenomena in Space Plasmas Kiten, July 2006 Nonlinear effects in charged particle transport in turbulent

Conclusions We have presented the problem of non-linear charged particle transport in magnetic turbulence

We have shown that the relevant parameter is the magnetic Kubo number

For K > 1 strong nonlinear effects appear:• magnetic line structures with high degree of coherence • memory effects that leads to subdiffusive transport in z-independent magnetic fluctuations and to anomalous diffusion coefficients in the presence of a decorrelation mechanism• non-Gaussian distribution of displacements

The decorrelation trajectory method and the nested subensemble method can discribe this process of intrinsic structure formation in magnetic turbulence. They can be adapted to the conditions of space plasma magnetic turbulence (3d fluctuations of the magnetic field, small average field, etc.)These methods give a clear physical image on these nonlinear process.

VL

L

BBK cII

c

II

,

)/( 0