LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Momentum, angular momentum, and spin of waves in an isotropic collisionless plasma.

Photo by tabithaturnervisuals from unsplash

We examine the momentum and angular momentum (including spin) properties of linear waves, both longitudinal (Langmuir) and transverse (electromagnetic), in an isotropic nonrelativistic collisionless electron plasma. We focus on conserved… Click to show full abstract

We examine the momentum and angular momentum (including spin) properties of linear waves, both longitudinal (Langmuir) and transverse (electromagnetic), in an isotropic nonrelativistic collisionless electron plasma. We focus on conserved quantities associated with the translational and rotational invariance of the wave fields with respect to the homogeneous medium; these are sometimes called pseudomomenta. There are two types of the momentum and angular momentum densities: (i) the kinetic ones associated with the energy flux density and the symmetrized (Belinfante) energy-momentum tensor and (ii) the canonical ones associated with the conserved Noether currents and canonical energy-momentum tensor. We find that the canonical momentum and spin densities of Langmuir waves are similar to those of sound waves in fluids or gases; they are naturally expressed via the electron velocity field. In turn, the momentum and spin densities of electromagnetic waves can be written either in the forms known for free-space electromagnetic fields, involving only the electric field, or in the dual-symmetric forms involving both electric and magnetic fields, as well as the effective permittivity of plasma. We derive these properties both within the phenomenological macroscopic approach and microscopic Lagrangian field theory for the coupled electromagnetic fields and electrons. Finally, we explore implications of the canonical momentum and spin densities in transport and electrodynamic phenomena: the Stokes drift, the wave-induced magnetization (inverse Faraday effect), etc.

Keywords: momentum spin; collisionless; angular momentum; spin; momentum angular; momentum

Journal Title: Physical review. E
Year Published: 2022

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.