### Session DM: Kinetics Workshop: Electron Kinetics

4:00 PM–5:30 PM, Monday, October 19, 2009
Saratoga Hilton Room: Ballroom 1

Chair: Laxminarajan Raja, University of Texas at Austin

Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.GEC.DM.3

### Abstract: DM.00003 : Kinetic Theory of Instability-Enhanced Collisional Effects

5:00 PM–5:30 PM

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#### Author:

Scott Baalrud
A generalization of the Lenard-Balescu collision operator is derived which accounts for the scattering of particles by instability amplified fluctuations that originate from the thermal motion of discrete particles (in contrast to evoking a fluctuation level externally, as is done in quasilinear kinetic theory) [1]. Emphasis is placed on plasmas with convective instabilities. It is shown that an instability-enhanced collective response results which can be the primary mechanism for scattering particles, being orders of magnitude more frequent than conventional Coulomb collisions, even though the fluctuations are in a linear growth phase. The resulting collision operator is shown to obey conservation laws (energy, momentum, and density), Galilean invariance, and the Boltzmann ${\mathcal{H}}$-theorem. It has the property that Maxwellian is the unique equilibrium distribution function; again in contrast to weak turbulence or quasilinear theories. Instability-enhanced collisional effects can dominate the physics of low-temperature plasmas. For example, this theory has been applied to two outstanding problems: Langmuir's paradox [2] and determining Bohm's criterion for plasmas with multiple ion species. Langmuir's paradox is a measurement of anomalous electron scattering rapidly establishing a Maxwellian distribution in gas discharges with low temperature and pressure. This may be explained by instability-enhanced scattering in the plasma-boundary transition region (presheath) where convective ion-acoustic instabilities are excited. Bohm's criterion for multiple ion species is a single condition that the ion fluid speeds must obey at the sheath edge; but it is insufficient to determine the speed of individual species. It is shown that an instability-enhanced collisional friction, due to streaming instabilities in the presheath, determines this criterion.\\[4pt] [1] S.D. Baalrud, J.D. Callen, and C.C. Hegna, Phys. Plasmas {\bf 15}, 092111 (2008).\\[0pt] [2] S.D. Baalrud, J.D. Callen, and C.C. Hegna, Phys. Rev. Lett. (to appear June 2009); preprint UW-CPTC 09-4 at www.cptc.wisc.edu.