From:
"John W. McKelliget" <John_McKelliget@uml.edu>
Newsgroups:
sci.physics.plasma
Subject: CHARTER, WHAT IS A PLASMA? September
2002
Organization: University of Massachusetts - Lowell
Expires: 01
October 2002
Welcome to the sci.physics.plasma newsgroup.
This
is a monthly posting intended to introduce you to the
newsgroup and to
plasmas in general.
CONTENTS:
1. Statistics
2. sci.physics.plasma Archive
3. Role of Moderator
4. Current Moderator
5. Previous Moderator
6. Problems
7. Charter
8. What is a Plasma?
9. Plasma Related Links
1.
STATISTICS:
In August 2002 27 articles were approved for posting
to
sci.physics.plasma
2. SCI.PHYSICS.PLASMA ARCHIVE:
These,
and all previous postings to the newsgroup, can be found in
the
sci.physics.plasma archive which is currently unavailable , but is being worked
on.
3. ROLE OF MODERATOR:
sci.physics.plasma
is a moderated newsgroup.
All postings are sent to the moderator who
checks to see that the
posting conforms to the newsgroup's charter. The moderator is not an
editor or
censor and should not be considered at fault for any incorrect
information
appearing in the newsgroup.
4. CURRENT MODERATOR: (since July
1996)
John W. McKelliget
Dept. of Mechanical Engineering
University
of Massachusetts
Lowell, MA 01854
mailto:John_McKelliget@uml.edu
http://jmckelliget.eng.uml.edu/
5.
PREVIOUS MODERATOR AND NEWSGROUP INITIATOR:
sci.physics.plasma was
initiated by Tim Eastman (plasmas@bellatlantic.com) in
July 1994
6.
PROBLEMS:
If you are experiencing problems posting to
sci.physics.plasma or in
using the archive please contact the current
moderator at his email
address. If
your newsreader does not allow you to post to newsgroups
you can email
your post to
sci-physics-plasma@uunet.uu.net
7. CHARTER: NEWSGROUP for
Plasma Science and Technology
Plasmas are as rich as any other state
of matter in terms of distinct
processes and they encompass
distinguishable scales ranging from the
atomic to the galactic.
Opportunities in plasma science and technology
reflect this breadth in
phenomena and scales; one recent list contains
close to 200 subject areas
and more than 90 applications areas including
thin-film diamond
deposition, toxic waste disposal, plasma arcs for
steel processing, laser
self-focusing, fusion for energy production, gas
and arc lamps, cutting
and welding, and semiconductor production.
The Plasma Science and
Technology research community seeks an increased
dialogue among its
multifarious constituencies. The NEWSGROUP for Plasma
Science and
Technology is intended as a community forum for sharing new
developments
and bringing researchers together for potential new
collaborations. The newsgroup also provides a forum for public
outreach
and education. Postings
from students and the general public are
welcome as we all help one
another in learning more about the "fourth
state of matter" and
its enormous range
of applications.
8. WHAT IS A PLASMA?:
The
loosest definition of a plasma is that it is an electrically
conducting
gas. At normal temperatures and
pressures gases are usually
very good electrical insulators. This is because the electrons in the
gas
are tightly bound inside gas atoms and are not free to move in
response to
externally applied electric or magnetic fields.
Under certain
conditions, however, some or all of the electrons can be
removed from
their parent atoms, a process called ionization. The gas
then consists of a mixture of negatively charged
electrons, positively
charged atoms, called ions, and un-ionized neutrally
charged atoms. Now
the electrons
and ions are free to move under the action of applied
electromagnetic
fields and the gas can conduct electricity.
Due to
their much smaller mass the electrons respond to the applied
fields much
more readily than the ions and, consequently, carry most of
the
current. Since electrons and
ions are produced in pairs and have
opposite charges most of the plasma
remains electrically neutral.
There are three principal methods for
ionizing a gas. The first, called
field
ionization, involves applying an extremely high electrical field
that acts
on the electrons in a neutral atom and essentially disrupts
the atom. The second, called thermal ionization,
involves raising the
temperature of the gas until collisions knock
electrons out of the
atoms. Thus,
a plasma does not have to be "hot", although some are
extremely
so. The third method involves bombarding the gas with
high energy
radiation or other sub-atomic particles.
Because the properties of a
plasma are so very diferent from those of a
neutral gas the plasma state
is sometimes called " the fourth state of
matter ".
In
practice the plasma state covers an extremely large range of
temperature
and pressure, from the gas in the fluorescent lamps in your
house to the
fusion reactions in the center of the sun.
Although you
may have to search for a plasma in your daily life,
most of the visible
matter in the universe is in the plasma state.
Technological
applications of plasmas include: fluorescent lights,
welding arcs,
steelmaking furnaces, experimental fusion reactors,
semiconductor
processing, flat panel displays,
photovoltaics, solar coatings,
architectural coatings,
and hazardous waste processing.
- J. McKelliget 1998
9. PLASMA RELATED
LINKS:
"The Plasma State" an essay commisioned by the
American Physical Society
Division of Plasma Physics
http://w3fusion.ph.utexas.edu/aps/plasmaState/PPSPage1.html
Plasma
science & technology homepage
http://www.plasmas.org/
Extensive
additional plasma material can be found at
http://plasma-gate.weizmann.ac.il/PlasmaI.html
http://personal.lig.bellsouth.net/lig/i/n/infonet/Plasma.htm
Listings
of upcoming plasma conferences can be found at the following
sites
http://hibp7.ecse.rpi.edu/~connor/ieee/plasma_meetings
http://plasma-gate.weizmann.ac.il/CoAPP.html
http://www.nifs.ac.jp/jspf/cldr-e.html