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This book presents recent results on the modelling of space plasmas
with Kappa distributions and their interpretation. Hot and dilute
space plasmas most often do not reach thermal equilibrium, their
dynamics being essentially conditioned by the kinetic effects of
plasma particles, i.e., electrons, protons, and heavier ions.
Deviations from thermal equilibrium shown by these plasma particles
are often described by Kappa distributions. Although well-known,
these distributions are still controversial in achieving a
statistical characterization and a physical interpretation of
non-equilibrium plasmas. The results of the Kappa modelling
presented here mark a significant progress with respect to all
these aspects and open perspectives to understanding the
high-resolution data collected by the new generation of telescopes
and spacecraft missions. The book is directed to the large
community of plasma astrophysics, including graduate students and
specialists from associated disciplines, given the palette of the
proposed topics reaching from applications to the solar atmosphere
and the solar wind, via linear and quasilinear modelling of
multi-species plasmas and waves within, to the fundamental physics
of nonequilibrium plasmas.
The various processes that connect the physics of the Sun with that
of the Earths environment has become known as "Space Weather"
during recent years, a slogan that has emerged in connection with
many other expressions adapted from meteorology, such as solar
wind, magnetic clouds or polar rain. This volume is intended as a
first graduate-level textbook-style account on the physics of these
solar-terrestrial relations and their impact on our natural and
technological environment.
The various processes that connect the physics of the Sun with that
of the Earth`s environment has become known as "Space Weather"
during recent years, a slogan that has emerged in connection with
many other expressions adapted from meteorology, such as solar
wind, magnetic clouds or polar rain. This volume is intended as a
first graduate-level textbook-style account on the physics of these
solar-terrestrial relations and their impact on our natural and
technological environment.
This book presents recent results on the modelling of space plasmas
with Kappa distributions and their interpretation. Hot and dilute
space plasmas most often do not reach thermal equilibrium, their
dynamics being essentially conditioned by the kinetic effects of
plasma particles, i.e., electrons, protons, and heavier ions.
Deviations from thermal equilibrium shown by these plasma particles
are often described by Kappa distributions. Although well-known,
these distributions are still controversial in achieving a
statistical characterization and a physical interpretation of
non-equilibrium plasmas. The results of the Kappa modelling
presented here mark a significant progress with respect to all
these aspects and open perspectives to understanding the
high-resolution data collected by the new generation of telescopes
and spacecraft missions. The book is directed to the large
community of plasma astrophysics, including graduate students and
specialists from associated disciplines, given the palette of the
proposed topics reaching from applications to the solar atmosphere
and the solar wind, via linear and quasilinear modelling of
multi-species plasmas and waves within, to the fundamental physics
of nonequilibrium plasmas.
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