RESUMEN
The stability of ion plasma perturbations is investigated in a homogeneous isotropic complex plasma, where a balance between plasma creation due to ionization and plasma loss due to the absorption on dust particles has been reached. The analysis is performed on the basis of a self-consistent fluid description including dust charge variations and ion-neutral friction. It is shown that the stability depends primarily on the nature of the ionization source. For an ionization source proportional to the electron density, an instability takes place at wave numbers below a certain threshold, and the instability mechanism is explained in detail. No instability is found for a constant ionization source.
RESUMEN
Stability principles for bilayer complex plasmas are studied. To mimic bilayer crystals and identify the main melting mechanism of such structures, a simple binary-chain model is employed. This approach provides adequate representation of the collective effects and accurate description of the interaction nonreciprocity, associated with the wake-mediated interparticle forces. It is shown that the wake-induced coupling of the wave modes sustained in different crystalline layers can trigger the dynamical instability. Furthermore, the mode coupling is demonstrated to be a universal instability mechanism, operating also in bilayer fluids. General stability criteria for the crystalline and fluid bilayers are derived.
RESUMEN
The linearized potential of a moving test charge in a one-component fully degenerate fermion plasma is studied using the Lindhard dielectric function. The motion is found to greatly enhance the Friedel oscillations behind the charge, especially for velocities larger than half of the Fermi velocity, in which case the asymptotic behavior of their amplitude changes from 1/r3 to 1/r2.5. In the absence of the quantum recoil (tunneling) the potential reduces to a form similar to that in a classical Maxwellian plasma, with a difference being that the plasma oscillations behind the charge at velocities larger than the Fermi velocity are not Landau damped.
RESUMEN
We present a shear instability, which can be triggered in compressible fluids with density-dependent viscosity at shear rates above critical. The instability mechanism is generic: It is based on density-dependent viscosity, compressibility, as well as flow two-(three-)dimensionality that provides coupling between streamwise and transversal velocity components and density variations. The only factor stabilizing the instability is fluid elasticity. The corresponding eigenvalue problem for a plane Couette flow is solved analytically in the limiting cases of large and small wave numbers.
RESUMEN
We report the experimental discovery of "electrorheological (ER) complex plasmas," where the control of the interparticle interaction by an externally applied electric field is due to distortion of the Debye spheres that surround microparticles (dust) in a plasma. We show that interactions in ER plasmas under weak ac fields are mathematically equivalent to those in conventional ER fluids. Microgravity experiments, as well as molecular dynamics simulations, show a phase transition from an isotropic to an anisotropic (string) plasma state as the electric field is increased.
RESUMEN
Investigations of shear flows in three-dimensional complex-plasma fluids produced in a dc discharge were carried out. The shear was induced either by an inhomogeneous gas flow or by a laser beam. The viscosity of complex plasmas was measured over a broad range of shear rates, up to the hydrodynamic limit when the discreteness becomes important. Analysis of the measurements reveals non-Newtonian behavior of complex plasmas accompanied by substantial shear thinning.