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The collisional particle-in-cell method for the Vlasov–Maxwell–Landau equations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 October 2024

Rafael Bailo*
Affiliation:
Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, UK
José A. Carrillo
Affiliation:
Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, UK
Jingwei Hu
Affiliation:
Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Washington, USA
*
Email address for correspondence: bailo@maths.ox.ac.uk

Abstract

We introduce an extension of the particle-in-cell method that captures the Landau collisional effects in the Vlasov–Maxwell–Landau equations. The method arises from a regularisation of the variational formulation of the Landau equation, leading to a discretisation of the collision operator that conserves mass, charge, momentum and energy, while increasing the (regularised) entropy. The collisional effects appear as a fully deterministic effective force, thus the method does not require any transport–collision splitting. The scheme can be used in arbitrary dimension, and for a general interaction, including the Coulomb case. We validate the scheme on scenarios such as the Landau damping, the two-stream instability and the Weibel instability, demonstrating its effectiveness in the numerical simulation of plasma.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. Typical solution in the Maxwellian case of the validation test of § 3.1.1. Here $C=2^{-4}$; $t\in (0,15)$; $N_{v}=64$; $N_c=8$; $\Delta t=10^{-2}$; $R=16$.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Order of convergence for the validation test of § 3.1.1. Relative ${L^{2}}$ errors of the regularised solutions $\tilde {f}^N$. Here $C=2^{-4}$; $t\in (0,15)$.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Numerical Landau damping in the validation test of § 3.1.2. Here $t\in (0,10)$; $N_{x}=128$; $N_{v}=32$; $N_c=8$; $\Delta t=50^{-1}$; $R=32$. Total of $1\,048\,576$ particles. Constants $\gamma _l$ and $\gamma _{l,c}$ given in § 3.1.2.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Entropy and entropy transport error in the Landau damping validation test of § 3.1.2. Here $t\in (0,10)$; $N_{x}=128$; $N_{v}=32$; $N_c=8$; $\Delta t=50^{-1}$; $R=32$. Total of $1\,048\,576$ particles.

Figure 4

Figure 5. Vortex formation in the two-stream instability test of § 3.2.1 (marginals of $\tilde {f}^N$). Here $t\in (0,50)$; $N_{x}=256$; $N_{v_1}=32$; $N_{v_2}=4$; $N_c=16$; $\Delta t=20^{-1}$; $R=32$. Total of $524\,288$ particles. See Bailo et al. (2024a,b) for animations.

Figure 5

Figure 6. Final vortex in the two-stream instability test of § 3.2.1 (marginals of $\tilde {f}^N$). Here $t\in (0,50)$; $N_{x}=256$; $N_{v_1}=32$; $N_{v_2}=4$; $N_c=16$; $\Delta t=20^{-1}$; $R=32$. Total of $524\,288$ particles. See Bailo et al. (2024a,b) for animations.

Figure 6

Figure 7. Energy and entropy in the two-stream instability test of § 3.2.1. Here $t\in (0,50)$; $N_{x}=256$; $N_{v_1}=32$; $N_{v_2}=4$; $N_c=16$; $\Delta t=20^{-1}$; $R=32$. Total of $524\,288$ particles. See Bailo et al. (2024a,b) for animations.

Figure 7

Figure 8. Exponential growth of the electric field in the two-stream instability test of § 3.2.1. Here $t\in (0,50)$; $N_{x}=256$; $N_{v_1}=32$; $N_{v_2}=4$; $N_c=16$; $\Delta t=20^{-1}$; $R=32$. Total of $524\,288$ particles. See Bailo et al. (2024a,b) for animations. Constants $\gamma _s$ and $\gamma _{s,c}$ given in § 3.2.1.

Figure 8

Figure 9. Electron beam collapse in the Weibel instability test of § 3.2.2 (marginals of $\tilde {f}^N$). Here $t\in (0,125)$; $N_{x}=32$; $N_{v}=64$; $N_c=8$; $\Delta t=10^{-1}$; $R=64$. Total of $1\,048\,576$ particles. See Bailo et al. (2024a,b) for animations.

Figure 9

Figure 10. Final beam collapse in the Weibel instability test of § 3.2.2 (marginals of $\tilde {f}^N$). Here $t\in (0,125)$; $N_{x}=32$; $N_{v}=64$; $N_c=8$; $\Delta t=10^{-1}$; $R=64$. Total of $1\,048\,576$ particles. See Bailo et al. (2024a,b) for animations.

Figure 10

Figure 11. Energy and entropy in the Weibel instability test of § 3.2.2. $t\in (0,125)$. Here ${N_{x}=32}$; $N_{v}=64$; $N_c=8$; $\Delta t=10^{-1}$; $R=64$. Total of $1\,048\,576$ particles. See Bailo et al. (2024a,b) for animations.

Figure 11

Figure 12. Collisionless conservation-of-energy error on two-stream instability (§ 3.2.1) and the Weibel instability (§ 3.2.2) as a function of $\Delta t$. Starting from the original simulation parameters, $N_c$ is doubled twice, and $\Delta t$ is halved three times; other parameters remain unchanged.