SUPRATHERMAL ELECTRON TRANSPORT IN WEAKLY AND STRONGLY MAGNETIZED ASTROPHYSICAL PLASMAS INCLUDING COULOMB COLLISIONAL EFFECTS
- Authors: Ha J.1
- 
							Affiliations: 
							- Korea Space Weather Center, Korea AeroSpace Administration
 
- Issue: Vol 167, No 1 (2025)
- Pages: 129-140
- Section: STATISTICAL AND NONLINEAR PHYSICS, PHYSICS OF "SOFT" MATTER
- URL: https://rjpbr.com/0044-4510/article/view/683899
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.31857/S0044451025010110
- ID: 683899
Cite item
Abstract
This study examines electron transport in astrophysical plasmas mediated by Coulomb collisions and collisionless wave-particle interactions, using a kinetic transport model that incorporates spectral evolutions through these interactions. It investigates the transport of suprathermal electrons via whistler turbulence and the effects of plasma magnetization. Key findings indicate that in strongly magnetized plasmas, diffusion timescales in pitch angle space become saturated at large pitch angles, independent of increasing magnetic field strength. Conversely, in weakly magnetized plasmas, these timescales decrease with decreasing magnetic field strength, enhancing electron transport in velocity space. The study also identifies minimum conditions for resonant scattering, dominated by wave-particle interactions over Coulomb collisions, which depend on Coulomb collision effects and the power-law slope of the whistler turbulence spectrum. These findings have applications in weakly magnetized astrophysical plasmas, from the relatively strong magnetic fields of the interplanetary medium to the very weak magnetic fields of the intracluster medium.
About the authors
Ji-Hoon Ha
Korea Space Weather Center, Korea AeroSpace Administration
							Author for correspondence.
							Email: hjhspace223@gmail.com
				                					                																			                												                								Jeju, South Korea						
Supplementary files
 
				
			 
					 
						 
						 
						 
						 
									

 
  
  
  Email this article
			Email this article 

 Open Access
		                                Open Access Access granted
						Access granted Subscription or Fee Access
		                                							Subscription or Fee Access
		                                					