It is argued that the relativistic Vlasov–Maxwell equations of the kinetic theory of plasma approximately describe a relativistic system of N charged point particles interacting with the electromagnetic Maxwell fields… Click to show full abstract
It is argued that the relativistic Vlasov–Maxwell equations of the kinetic theory of plasma approximately describe a relativistic system of N charged point particles interacting with the electromagnetic Maxwell fields in a Bopp–Landé–Thomas–Podolsky (BLTP) vacuum, provided the microscopic dynamics lasts long enough. The purpose of this work is not to supply an entirely rigorous vindication, but to lay down a conceptual road map for the microscopic foundations of the kinetic theory of special-relativistic plasma, and to emphasize that a rigorous derivation seems feasible. Rather than working with a BBGKY-type hierarchy of n -point marginal probability measures, the approach proposed in this paper works with the distributional PDE of the actual empirical 1-point measure, which involves the actual empirical 2-point measure in a convolution term. The approximation of the empirical 1-point measure by a continuum density, and of the empirical 2-point measure by a (tensor) product of this continuum density with itself, yields a finite- N Vlasov-like set of kinetic equations which includes radiation-reaction and nontrivial finite- N corrections to the Vlasov–Maxwell–BLTP model. The finite- N corrections formally vanish in a mathematical scaling limit $$N\rightarrow \infty $$ N → ∞ in which charges $$\propto 1/\surd {N}$$ ∝ 1 / √ N . The radiation-reaction term vanishes in this limit, too. The subsequent formal limit sending Bopp’s parameter $$\varkappa \rightarrow \infty $$ ϰ → ∞ yields the Vlasov–Maxwell model.
               
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