xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-contributor-funder:
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Sponsor:
E. S. is supported by Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation (pliona project) and G. S. A. is supported by the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad of Spain under the Grant No RYC-2014-15357) and the project ENE2014-54960R.
Project:
Gobierno de España. RYC-2014-15357 Gobierno de España. ENE2014-54960R
The existence of localized electromagnetic structures is discussed in the framework of the 1-dimensional relativistic Maxwell-fluid model for a cold plasma with immobile ions. New partially localized solutions are found with a finite-difference algorithm desigThe existence of localized electromagnetic structures is discussed in the framework of the 1-dimensional relativistic Maxwell-fluid model for a cold plasma with immobile ions. New partially localized solutions are found with a finite-difference algorithm designed to locate numerically exact solutions of the Maxwell-fluid system. These solutions are called quasi-solitons and consist of a localized electromagnetic wave trapped in a self-generated plasma density cavity with oscillations at its tails. They are organized in families characterized by the number of nodes p of the vector potential and exist in a continuous range of parameters in the omega -V plane, where V is the velocity of propagation and. is the vector potential angular frequency. A parametric study shows that the familiar fully localized relativistic solitons are special members of the families of partially localized quasi-solitons. Soliton solution branches with p > 0 are therefore parametrically embedded in the continuum of quasi-solitons. On the other hand, geometric arguments and numerical simulations indicate that p = 0 solitons exist only in the limit of either small amplitude or vanishing velocity. Direct numerical simulations of the Maxwell-fluid model indicate that the p > 0 quasi-solitons ( and embedded solitons) are unstable and lead to wake excitation, while p = 0 quasi-solitons appear stable. This helps explain the ubiquitous observation of structures that resemble p = 0 solitons in numerical simulations of laser-plasma interaction.[+][-]