Publication | Open Access
Discrete particle noise in particle-in-cell simulations of plasma microturbulence
91
Citations
24
References
2005
Year
EngineeringPlasma ScienceParticle MethodPlasma PhysicsGlobal Pic CodePlasma SimulationNumerical SimulationNoiseMagnetohydrodynamicsElectron Temperature GradientPhysicsBasic Plasma PhysicApplied Plasma PhysicDiscrete Particle NoiseRadiation TransportPlasma InstabilityNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsMultiscale Modeling
Recent gyrokinetic simulations of electron temperature gradient (ETG) turbulence with the global particle-in-cell (PIC) code GTC [Z. Lin et al., Proceedings of the 20th Fusion Energy Conference, Vilamoura, Portugal, 2004 (IAEA, Vienna, 2005)] yielded different results from earlier flux-tube continuum code simulations [F. Jenko and W. Dorland, Phys. Rev. Lett. 89, 225001 (2002)] despite similar plasma parameters. Differences between the simulation results were attributed to insufficient phase-space resolution and novel physics associated with global simulation models. The results of the global PIC code are reproduced here using the flux-tube PIC code PG3EQ [A. M. Dimits et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 71 (1996)], thereby eliminating global effects as the cause of the discrepancy. The late-time decay of the ETG turbulence and the steady-state heat transport observed in these PIC simulations are shown to result from discrete particle noise. Discrete particle noise is a numerical artifact, so both these PG3EQ simulations and, by inference, the GTC simulations that they reproduced have little to say about steady-state ETG turbulence and the associated anomalous heat transport. In the course of this work several diagnostics are developed to retrospectively test whether a particular PIC simulation is dominated by discrete particle noise.
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