Physics:Quantum Plasma physics
Quantum plasma physics studies ionized matter when collective electromagnetic behavior must be understood together with microscopic particle motion, radiation, collisions, waves, or quantum-scale constraints. In the Quantum Collection it connects fusion plasmas, kinetic theory, transport, drift motion, instabilities, and detector or beam environments where charged particles interact through long-range fields.[1]
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.[2]
See also
Table of contents (84 articles)
Index
Full contents
References
- ↑ Piel, A. (2010). Plasma Physics: An Introduction to Laboratory, Space, and Fusion Plasmas. Springer. pp. 4-5. ISBN 978-3-642-10491-6.
- ↑ Morozov, A. I. (2012). Introduction to Plasma Dynamics. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4398-8132-3.
Source attribution: Physics:Quantum Plasma physics
