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Electrostatic waves and solitons in electron-positron plasmas.

The magnetosphere of pulsars is thought to consist of an electron-positron

plasma rotating in the pulsar magnetic field (Beskin, Gurevich & Istomin

1983; Lominadze, Melikidze & Pataraya 1984; Gurevich & Istomin 1985). A

finite, and indeed large, longitudinal electric field exists outside the star, and

may accelerate particles, stripped from the surface, to high energies (Goldreich

& Julian 1969; Beskin 1993). These particles may leave the magnetosphere

via open magnetic field lines at the poles of the pulsar. This depletion

of particles causes a vacuum gap to arise, a double layer of substantial potential

difference. The primary particles, extracted from the star's surface,

are accelerated in the double layer, along the pulsar magnetic field lines,

and so produce curvature radiation. The curvature photons, having travelled

the distance of the double layer may produce electron-positron pairs

above the vacuum gap. These first-generation secondary particles, although

no longer accelerating, may synchroradiate, generating photons which may

then produce further electron-positron pairs. These synchrophoton produced

pairs will be at energies lower than curvature photon produced pairs, since

synchrophoton energies are approximately an order of magnitude less than

that of the parent curvature photon.

An attempt to model the electron-positron pulsar magnetosphere is made.

A four component fluid electron-positron plasma is considered, consisting of a

hot electron and positron species, at temperature Th , and a cool electron and

positron species at temperature Tc . The hot components represent the parent

first-generation curvature-born pairs, and the cooler components represent

the second-generation pairs, born of synchrophotons. The hot components

are assumed to be highly mobile, and are thus described by a Boltzmann

density distribution. The cool components are more sluggish and are thus

described as adiabatic fluids. The model is symmetric in accordance with

pair production mechanisms, so that both species of hot(cool) electrons and

positrons have the same temperature Th(Tc, and number density Nh(Nc ) .

In the interests of completeness, linear electrostatic waves in five different

types of electron-positron plasmas are considered. The dispersion relations

for electrostatic waves arising in these unmagnetized plasmas are derived.

Single species electron-positron plasmas are investigated, considering

the constituents to be: both Boltzmann distributed; both adiabatic fluids;

and finally, one species of each type. Linear electrostatic acoustic waves in

multi-component electron-positron plasmas are then considered, under the

four component model and a three component model (Srinivas, Popel &

Shukla 1996).

Small amplitude nonlinear electron-positron acoustic waves are investigated,

under the four component electron-positron plasma model. Reductive

perturbation techniques (Washimi & Taniuti 1966) and a derivation of the

Korteweg-de Vries equation result in a zero nonlinear coefficient, and a purely

dispersive governing wave equation. Higher order nonlinearity is included,

leading to a modified Korteweg-de Vries equation (Watanabe 1984; Verheest

1988), which yields stationary soliton solutions with a sech dependence rather

than the more familiar sech2.

Arbitrary amplitude solitons are then considered via both numerical and

analytical (Chatterjee & Roychoudhury 1995) analysis of the Sagdeev potential.

The symmetric nature of the model leads to the existence of purely

symmetrical compressive and rarefactive soliton solutions. Small and arbitrary

amplitude soliton solutions are compared, and show good correlation.

Under the assumption of Boltzmann distributed hot particles, severe restrictions

are imposed on the existence domains of arbitrary amplitude soliton

solutions. The Boltzmann assumption places a stringent upper limit on the

cool species number density, in order for the solutions to be physical.

An investigation is made of results obtained for an asymmetric electronpositron

plasma (Pillay & Bharuthram 1992), consisting of cold electrons

and positrons, and hot Boltzmann electrons and positrons at different temperatures

Teh and Tph , and number density Neh and Nph . It is found that

the assumption of Boltzmann particles again places restrictions on the acoustic

soliton existence space, and that the results obtained may be physically

invalid. Valid solutions are obtained numerically, within the boundaries of

allowed cool species density values. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1998.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:ukzn/oai:http://researchspace.ukzn.ac.za:10413/4651
Date January 1998
CreatorsGray, Greer Jillian.
ContributorsHellberg, Manfred.
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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