Title :
Collisionless spectral-kinetic simulation of the multipole resonance probe on GPU
Author :
Schilling, Claudia ; Dobrygin, W. ; Szeremley, Daniel ; Oberrath, J. ; Eremin, Denis ; Mussenbrock, Thomas ; Brinkmann, Ralf Peter
Author_Institution :
Ruhr Univ. Bochum, Bochum, Germany
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Plasma resonance spectroscopy is a well established plasma diagnostic method realized in several designs. One of these designs is the multipole resonance probe (MRP). In its idealized geometrically simplified version it consists of two dielectrically shielded, hemispherical electrodes to which an RF signal is applied. A numerical tool is under development, which is capable of simulating the dynamics of the plasma surrounding the MRP in electrostatic approximation.In the simulation the potential is separation in an inner and a vacuum potential. The inner potential is influenced by the charged particles and is calculated by a specialized Poisson solver. The vacuum potential fulfills Laplace´s equation and consists of the applied voltage of the probe as boundary condition. Both potentials are expanded in spherical harmonics. For a practical particle pusher implementation, the expansion must be appropriately truncated. Compared to a PIC simulation a grid is unnecessary to calculate the force on the particles. To reduce the simulation time the code is parallelized and used on a GPU. This work purpose is a collisionless kinetic simulation, which can be used to investigate kinetic effects on the resonance behavior of the MRP.
Keywords :
Laplace equations; Poisson equation; graphics processing units; plasma kinetic theory; plasma probes; plasma simulation; GPU; Laplace equation; MRP resonance behavior; PIC simulation; Poisson solver; RF signal; boundary condition; charged particle; collisionless spectral-kinetic simulation; electrostatic approximation; hemispherical electrode; inner potential; multipole resonance probe; numerical tool; plasma diagnostic method; plasma dynamics simulation; plasma resonance spectroscopy; spherical harmonics; vacuum potential; Educational institutions; Electric potential; Graphics processing units; Kinetic theory; Materials requirements planning; Plasmas; Probes;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science (ICOPS), 2013 Abstracts IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.2013.6635031