Vlasov-Maxwell equation: Difference between revisions
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<math>\nabla \Delta^{-1} 4 \pi \rho</math>. Considerably more is known for the existence theory of this equation. | <math>\nabla \Delta^{-1} 4 \pi \rho</math>. Considerably more is known for the existence theory of this equation. | ||
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[[Category:Equations]] | [[Category:Equations]] |
Revision as of 05:00, 29 July 2006
The Vlasov-Maxwell equations equations are given by
where is the particle density (and is non-negative), is the current density, is the charge density, and is the relativistic velocity. The vector fields E(t,x) and B(t,x) represent the electromagnetic field. x and v live in R^3 and t lives in R. This equation is a coupled wave and conservation law system, and models collision-less plasma at relativistic velocities.
Assuming that the particle density remains compactly supported in the velocity domain for all time, GWP in C^1 was proven in [GsSr1986b] (see also [GsSr1986], [GsSr1987]. An alternate proof of this result is in [KlSt2002]. A stronger result (which only imposes compact support conditions on the initial data, not on all time) regarding solutions to Vlasov-Maxwell which are purely outgoing (no incoming radiation) is in [Cal-p]. The velocity demain hypothesis can be removed in the "2.5 dimensional model" where the x_3 dependence is trivial but the v_3 dependence is not [GsScf1990]. Further results are in [GsSch1988], [Rei1990], [Wol1984], [Scf1986] The non-relativistic limit of Vlasov-Maxwell is Vlasov-Poisson, in which the electromagnetic field is replaced by . Considerably more is known for the existence theory of this equation.