Plasma parameter

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The plasma parameter is a number, denoted by capital Lambda, Λ, which measures the average number of electrons contained within a Debye sphere (a sphere of radius the Debye length) in a plasma (but note that the word parameter is usually used in plasma physics to refer to bulk plasma properties in general: see plasma parameters). It is defined as:


N_D = \frac {4\pi n (\lambda_D)^3} {3}

where

n is the number density of particles,
λD is the Debye length.

[edit] The plasma approximation

One of the criteria which determines whether a collection of charged particles can rigorously be termed a plasma is that Λ>>1. When this is the case, collective electrostatic interactions dominate over binary collisions, and the plasma particles can be treated as if they only interact with a smooth background field, rather than through pairwise interactions (collisions) [1].

[edit] Plasma properties and Λ

The magnitude of Λ can be summarised below [2]:

Description Plasma parameter magnitude
Λ<<1 Λ>>1
Coupling Strongly coupled plasma Weakly coupled plasma
Debye sphere Sparsely populated Densely populated
Electrostatic influence Almost continuously Occasional
Typical characteristic Cold and dense Hot and diffuse
Examples Solid-density laser ablation plasmas
Very "cold" "high pressure" arc discharge
White dwarfs / neutron stars atmospheres
Plasma ball
Ionospheric physics
Astrophysical plasmas
Nuclear fusion
Space plasma physics