Diagnosing entropy production and dissipation in fully kinetic plasmas

POSTER

Abstract

Many plasma systems, from the core of a tokamak to the outer heliosphere, are weakly collisional and thus most accurately described by kinetic theory. The typical approach to solving the kinetic equation has been the particle-in-cell algorithm, which, while a powerful tool, introduces counting noise into the particle distribution function. The counting noise is particularly problematic when attempting to study grand challenge problems such as entropy production from phenomena like shocks and turbulence. In this poster, we present studies of entropy production and dissipation processes present in simple turbulence and shock calculations using the continuum Vlasov-Maxwell solver in the Gkeyll framework. Particular emphasis is placed on a novel diagnostic, the field-particle correlation, which is especially efficient at separating the secular energy transfer into its constituent components, for example, cyclotron damping, Landau damping, or transit-time damping, when applied to a noise-free distribution function.

Authors

  • James Juno

    University of Maryland College Park

  • Jason TenBarge

    Princeton University, University of Maryland College Park

  • Ammar Hakim

    Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton Plasma Physics Lab, PPPL

  • William Dorland

    Univ of Maryland-College Park, University of Maryland College Park, University of Maryland

  • Petr Cagas

    Virginia Tech, Virginia Tech University