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Transmission and reflection of a solitary wave in two-dimensional dusty plasma due to an interface

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 September 2022

Wei-Ping Zhang
Affiliation:
College of Physics and Electronic Engineering, Northwest Normal University, Lanzhou 730070, PR China
Wen-Shan Duan*
Affiliation:
College of Physics and Electronic Engineering, Northwest Normal University, Lanzhou 730070, PR China
*
Email address for correspondence: duanws@nwnu.edu.cn
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Abstract

The reflection and transmission of an incident solitary wave with an arbitrary propagation direction due to an interface are investigated in the present paper. It is found that the propagation direction of the transmitted solitary wave depends on not only the propagation direction of the incident solitary wave, but also on the system parameters such as the masses, the number densities of dust particles in two different regions. Dependence of the transmission angle on the plasma parameters and incident angle are given analytically. Moreover, the number and amplitude of transmitted solitary waves and reflected solitary waves are also given when there is only one exact incident solitary wave. Our result has potential application, for example, we can devise an appropriate experiment to measure the differences of the masses and number densities of dust particles between two different regions by using our present results. Furthermore, we can also measure the electric charge of a dust particle by devising an appropriate experiment by using our results.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. Schematic diagram of incident, reflected and transmitted waves. Superscripts ‘$I$’, ‘$R$’ and ‘$T$’ in the text represent incident, reflected and transmitted waves. In the region $x < 0$, we use superscript ‘$-$’ to represent all the physical quantities, while in the region $x > 0$, we use superscript ‘$+$’ to represent all the physical quantities.

Figure 1

Figure 2. In the three-dimensional case, the influence of dust particle mass ${m^ + }$ and ${m^ - }$ on parameter $\chi$, where the orange line is $\chi = \frac {1}{4}$, $\tan \alpha =\frac {1}{4} \tan \theta$, the green line is $\chi = \frac {1}{2}$, $\tan \alpha =\frac {1}{2} \tan \theta$, the black line is $\chi = 1$, $\tan \alpha = \tan \theta$, the purple line is $\chi = \frac {3}{2}$, $\tan \alpha = \frac {3}{2} \tan \theta$, and the other system parameters are ${n_{d0}}^ + = {n_{d0}}^ - = 10 \times {10^{9}}\ {\textrm {m}^{ - 3}}$, ${n_{e0}} = 1.0 \times {10^{14}}\ {\textrm {m}^{ - 3}}$, ${T_e} = 5\ \textrm {eV}$, ${T_i} = 0.1\ \textrm {eV}$ and ${T_d} = 298\ \textrm {K}$.

Figure 2

Figure 3. In the three-dimensional case, the influence of dust particle number density ${n_{d0}}^ +$ and ${n_{d0}}^ -$ on the system parameter $\chi$, where the green line is $\chi = \frac {3}{5}$, $\tan \alpha = \frac {3}{5} \tan \theta$, the black line is $\chi = 1$, $\tan \alpha = \tan \theta$, the purple line is $\chi = \frac {3}{2}$, $\tan \alpha = \frac {3}{2} \tan \theta$, and the other system parameters are ${m^ + } = {m^ - } = 5.0 \times {10^{ - 15}}\ \textrm {kg}$, ${n_{e0}} = 1.0 \times {10^{14}}\ {\textrm {m}^{ - 3}}$, ${T_e} = 5\ \textrm {eV}$, ${T_i} = 0.1\ \textrm {eV}$ and ${T_d} = 298\ \textrm {K}$.