Physics:Quantum Plasma physics: Difference between revisions

From HandWiki Test
Expand short Quantum intro
Clean Quantum page image and red links
 
Line 12: Line 12:


<div style="width:300px;">
<div style="width:300px;">
<!-- No lead image available in existing page. -->
[[File:Quantum_Plasma_physics_concept_map.svg|thumb|280px|Plasma physics in the Quantum Collection.]]
</div>
</div>



Latest revision as of 23:33, 23 May 2026

Plasma physics is a Book I topic in the Quantum Collection. It studies ionized matter whose charged particles respond collectively to electric and magnetic fields. Quantum and high-energy contexts include fusion plasmas, beam plasmas, dense plasmas, astrophysical plasmas, and kinetic descriptions where microscopic particle motion shapes macroscopic behavior. The topic connects waves, instabilities, transport, magnetohydrodynamics, collisions, radiation, confinement, and plasma diagnostics. It is a bridge between many-particle dynamics and laboratory or astrophysical systems where electromagnetic interactions dominate.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Plasma physics in the Quantum Collection.

Overview

Plasma physics treats matter made of charged particles whose motion is coupled through electromagnetic fields. Quantum and high-energy contexts often use kinetic descriptions, magnetohydrodynamic approximations, transport coefficients, and wave-particle interactions to connect microscopic dynamics with macroscopic plasma behavior.[1]

See also

Table of contents (84 articles)

Index

Full contents

References

  1. Morozov, A. I. (2012). Introduction to Plasma Dynamics. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4398-8132-3. 


Author: Harold Foppele


Source attribution: Physics:Quantum Plasma physics