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On violent instability of a plasma-vacuum interface for an incompressible plasma flow and a nonzero displacement current in vacuum Full article

Journal Communications in Mathematical Sciences
ISSN: 1539-6746
Output data Year: 2020, Volume: 18, Number: 2, Pages: 321-337 Pages count : 17 DOI: 10.4310/CMS.2020.v18.n2.a2
Tags Free boundary problem; Ideal incompressible magnetohydrodynamics; Ill-posedness; Plasma-vacuum interface
Authors Trakhinin Y. 1,2
Affiliations
1 Sobolev Institute of Mathematics, Koptyug av. 4, Novosibirsk, 630090, Russian Federation
2 Department of Mechanics and Mathematics, Novosibirsk State University, Pirogova str. 1, Novosibirsk, 630090, Russian Federation

Abstract: In the classical statement of the plasma-vacuum interface problem in ideal magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) one neglects the displacement current in the vacuum region that gives the div-curl system of pre-Maxwell dynamics for the vacuum magnetic field. For understanding the influence of the vacuum electric field on the evolution of a plasma-vacuum interface we do not neglect the displacement current and consider the full Maxwell equations in vacuum. For the case of an incompressible plasma flow, by constructing an Hadamard-type ill-posedness example for the constant coefficient linearized problem we find a necessary and sufficient condition for the violent instability of a planar plasma-vacuum interface. In particular, we prove that as soon as the unperturbed plasma and vacuum magnetic fields are collinear, any nonzero unperturbed vacuum electric field makes the planar interface violently unstable. This shows the necessity of the corresponding non-collinearity condition for well-posedness and a crucial role of the vacuum electric field in the evolution of a plasma-vacuum interface. ©2020 International Press.
Cite: Trakhinin Y.
On violent instability of a plasma-vacuum interface for an incompressible plasma flow and a nonzero displacement current in vacuum
Communications in Mathematical Sciences. 2020. V.18. N2. P.321-337. DOI: 10.4310/CMS.2020.v18.n2.a2 Scopus OpenAlex
Identifiers:
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85086342685
OpenAlex: W3025396106
Citing:
DB Citing
Scopus 6
OpenAlex 11
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