English

Dispersion and the Speed-Limited Particle-in-Cell Algorithm

Plasma Physics 2021-08-31 v2 Computational Physics

Abstract

This paper discusses temporally continuous and discrete forms of the speed-limited particle-in-cell (SLPIC) method first treated by Werner et al. [Phys. Plasmas 25, 123512 (2018)]. The dispersion relation for a 1D1V electrostatic plasma whose fast particles are speed-limited is derived and analyzed. By examining the normal modes of this dispersion relation, we show that the imposed speed-limiting substantially reduces the frequency of fast electron plasma oscillations while preserving the correct physics of lower-frequency plasma dynamics (e.g. ion acoustic wave dispersion and damping). We then demonstrate how the timestep constraints of conventional electrostatic particle-in-cell methods are relaxed by the speed-limiting approach, thus enabling larger timesteps and faster simulations. These results indicate that the SLPIC method is a fast, accurate, and powerful technique for modeling plasmas wherein electron kinetic behavior is nontrivial (such that a fluid/Boltzmann representation for electrons is inadequate) but evolution is on ion timescales.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2102.11988,
  title  = {Dispersion and the Speed-Limited Particle-in-Cell Algorithm},
  author = {Thomas G. Jenkins and Gregory R. Werner and John R. Cary},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2102.11988},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

29 pages, 6 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T23:27:21.794Z