Hybrid Particle-in-Cell Simulations of Electromagnetic Coupling and Waves from Streaming Burst Debris

Published in Physics of Plasmas, 2022

Recommended citation: B. D. Keenan, A. Le, D. Winske, A. Stanier, B. A. Wetherton, M. Cowee, and F. Guo. Hybrid particle-in-cell simulations of electromagnetic coupling and waves from streaming burst debris. Physics of Plasmas. 2022. https://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/5.0075482

Various systems can be modeled as a point-like explosion of ionized debris into a magnetized, collisionless background plasma—including astrophysical examples, active experiments in space, and laser-driven laboratory experiments. Debris streaming from the explosion parallel to the magnetic field may drive multiple resonant and non-resonant ion–ion beam instabilities, some of which can efficiently couple the debris energy to the background and may even support the formation of shocks. We present a large-scale hybrid (kinetic ions + fluid electrons) particle-in-cell simulation, extending hundreds of ion inertial lengths from a 3D explosion, that resolves these instabilities. We show that the character of these instabilities differs notably from the 1D equivalent by the presence of unique transverse structure. Additional 2D simulations explore how the debris beam length, width, density, and speed affect debris–background coupling, with implications for the generation of quasi-parallel shocks.