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Chapter 3 - Transport Equations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 January 2010

Robert W. Schunk
Affiliation:
Utah State University
Andrew F. Nagy
Affiliation:
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
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Summary

A wide variety of plasma flows can be found in the various planetary ionospheres. For example, gentle near-equilibrium flows occur in the terrestrial ionosphere at midlatitudes, while highly nonequilibrium flow conditions exist in the terrestrial polar wind and in the Venus ionosphere near the solar terminator. The highly nonequilibrium flows are generally characterized by large temperature differences between the interacting species, by flow speeds approaching and exceeding thermal speeds, and by flow conditions changing from collision-dominated to collisionless regimes. In an effort to model the various ionospheric flow conditions, several different mathematical approaches have been used, including collision-dominated and collisionless transport equations, kinetic and semikinetic models, and macroscopic particle-in-cell techniques. However, the transport equation approach has received the most attention, because it can handle most of the flow conditions encountered in planetary ionospheres. Typically, numerous assumptions are made to simplify the transport equations before they are applied, and therefore, it is instructive to trace the derivation of the various sets of transport equations in order to establish their intrinsic strengths and limitations.

Boltzmann Equation

The Boltzmann equation not only is the starting point for the derivation of the different sets of transport equations but also forms the basis for the kinetic and semikinetic theories. With Boltzmann's approach, one is not interested in the motion of individual particles in the gas, but instead with the distribution of particles.

Type
Chapter
Information
Ionospheres
Physics, Plasma Physics, and Chemistry
, pp. 47 - 65
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2000

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