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Dive into the research topics where Sharmin Sultana is active.

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Featured researches published by Sharmin Sultana.


Physics of Plasmas | 2010

Oblique electrostatic excitations in a magnetized plasma in the presence of excess superthermal electrons

Sharmin Sultana; Ioannis Kourakis; Naresh Saini; M. A. Hellberg

The nonlinear propagation of ion-acoustic waves is considered in a magnetized plasma, composed of kappa distributed electrons and an inertial ion fluid. The fluid-dynamical system of equations governing the dynamics of ion-acoustic waves is reduced to a pseudoenergy-balance equation. The properties of arbitrary amplitude, obliquely propagating ion-acoustic solitary waves are thus investigated via a mechanical-motion analog (Sagdeev potential) approach. The presence of excess superthermal electrons is shown to influence the nature of magnetized ion-acoustic solitons. The influence on the soliton characteristics of relevant physical parameters such as obliqueness (the angle between soliton propagation direction and magnetic field), the electron deviation from a Maxwellian (“superthermality”) and the soliton speed is investigated.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2012

Dynamical characteristics of solitary waves, shocks and envelope modes in kappa-distributed non-thermal plasmas: an overview

Ioannis Kourakis; Sharmin Sultana; M. A. Hellberg

Space plasmas provide abundant evidence of highly energetic particle population, resulting in a long-tailed non-Maxwellian distribution. Furthermore, the first stages in the evolution of plasmas produced during laser–matter interaction are dominated by nonthermal electrons, as confirmed by experimental observation and computer simulations. This phenomenon is efficiently modelled via a kappa-type distribution. We present an overview, from first principles, of the effect of superthermality on the characteristics of electrostatic plasma waves. We rely on a fluid model for ion-acoustic excitations, employing a kappa distribution function to model excess superthermality of the electron distribution. Focusing on nonlinear excitations (solitons), in the form of solitary waves (pulses), shocks and envelope solitons, and employing standard methodological tools of nonlinear plasmadynamical analysis, we discuss the role of excess superthermality in their propagation dynamics (existence laws, stability profile), geometric characteristics and stability. Numerical simulations are employed to confirm theoretical predictions, namely in terms of the stability of electrostatic pulses, as well as the modulational stability profile of bright- and dark-type envelope solitons.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2011

Electrostatic solitary waves in the presence of excess superthermal electrons: modulational instability and envelope soliton modes

Sharmin Sultana; Ioannis Kourakis

The nonlinear dynamics of electrostatic solitary waves in the form of localized modulated wavepackets is investigated from first principles. Electron-acoustic (EA) excitations are considered in a two-electron plasma, via a fluid formulation. The plasma, assumed to be collisionless and uniform (unmagnetized), is composed of two types of electrons (inertial cold electrons and inertialess kappa-distributed superthermal electrons) and stationary ions. By making use of a multiscale perturbation technique, a nonlinear Schrodinger equation is derived for the modulated envelope, relying on which the occurrence of modulational instability (MI) is investigated in detail. Stationary profile localized EA excitations may exist, in the form of bright solitons (envelope pulses) or dark envelopes (voids). The presence of superthermal electrons modifies the conditions for MI to occur, as well as the associated threshold and growth rate. The concentration of superthermal electrons (i.e., the deviation from a Maxwellian electron distribution) may control or even suppress MI. Furthermore, superthermality affects the characteristics of solitary envelope structures, both qualitatively (supporting one or the other type, for different κ) and quantitatively, changing their characteristics (width, amplitude). The stability of bright and dark-type nonlinear structures is confirmed by numerical simulations.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Electrostatic shock dynamics in superthermal plasmas

Sharmin Sultana; Gianluca Sarri; Ioannis Kourakis

The propagation of ion acoustic shocks in nonthermal plasmas is investigated, both analytically and numerically. An unmagnetized collisionless electron-ion plasma is considered, featuring a superthermal (non-Maxwellian) electron distribution, which is modeled by a κ-(kappa) distribution function. Adopting a multiscale approach, it is shown that the dynamics of low-amplitude shocks is modeled by a hybrid Korteweg-de Vries–Burgers (KdVB) equation, in which the nonlinear and dispersion coefficients are functions of the κ parameter, while the dissipative coefficient is a linear function of the ion viscosity. All relevant shock parameters are shown to depend on κ: higher deviations from a pure Maxwellian behavior induce shocks which are narrower, faster, and of larger amplitude. The stability profile of the kink-shaped solutions of the KdVB equation against external perturbations is investigated. The spatial profile of the shocks is found to depend upon the dispersion and the dissipation term, and the role of ...


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2012

Oblique propagation of arbitrary amplitude electron acoustic solitary waves in magnetized kappa-distributed plasmas

Sharmin Sultana; Ioannis Kourakis; Manfred A. Hellberg

The linear and nonlinear properties of large-amplitude electron-acoustic waves are investigated in a magnetized plasma comprising two distinct electron populations (hot and cold) and immobile ions. The hot electrons are assumed to be in a non-Maxwellian state, characterized by an excess of superthermal particles, here modeled by a kappa-type long-tailed distribution function. Waves are assumed to propagate obliquely to the ambient magnetic field. Two types of electrostatic modes are shown to exist in the linear regime, and their properties are briefly analyzed. A nonlinear pseudopotential-type analysis reveals the existence of large-amplitude electrostatic solitary waves and allows for an investigation of their propagation characteristics and existence domain, in terms of the soliton speed (Mach number). The effects of the key plasma configuration parameters, namely the superthermality index and the cold electron density, on the soliton characteristics and existence domain, are studied. The role of obliqueness and magnetic field is discussed.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Electron-scale dissipative electrostatic solitons in multi-species plasmas

Sharmin Sultana; Ioannis Kourakis

The linear and nonlinear properties of small-amplitude electron-acoustic solitary waves are investigated via the fluid dynamical approach. A three-component plasma is considered, composed of hot electrons, cold electrons, and ions (considered stationary at the scale of interest). A dissipative (wave damping) effect is assumed due to electron-neutral collisions. The background (hot) electrons are characterized by an energetic (excessively superthermal) population and are thus modeled via a κ-type nonthermal distribution. The linear characteristics of electron-acoustic excitations are discussed, for different values of the plasma parameters (superthermality index κ and cold versus hot electron population concentration β). Large wavelengths (beyond a threshold value) are shown to be overdamped. The reductive perturbation technique is used to derive a dissipative Korteweg de-Vries (KdV) equation for small-amplitude electrostatic potential disturbances. These are expressed by exact solutions in the form of dis...


DUSTY∕COMPLEX PLASMAS: BASIC AND INTERDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH: Sixth International Conference on the Physics of Dusty Plasmas | 2011

Electrostatic waves in superthermal dusty plasmas: review of recent advancement

Ioannis Kourakis; Sharmin Sultana

Real plasmas are often caracterized by the presence of excess energetic particle populations, resulting in a long‐tailed non‐Maxwellian distribution. In Space plasma physics, this phenomenon is usually modelled via a kappa‐type distribution. This presentation is dedicated to an investigation, from first principles, of the effect of superthermality on the characteristics of dusty plasma modes. We employ a kappa distribution function to model the superthermality of the background components (electrons and/or ions). Background superthermality is shown to modify the charge screening mechanism in dusty plasmas, thus affecting the linear dispersion laws of both low‐and higher frequency DP modes substantially. Various experimentally observed effects may thus be interpreted as manifestations of superthermality. Focusing on the features of nonlinear excitations (solitons) as they occur in different dusty plasma modes, we investigate the role of superthermality in their propagation dynamics (existence laws, stabili...


Sixth International Conference on the Physics of Dusty Plasmas Date: 16–20 May 2011 Location: Garmisch‐Partenkirchen (Germany) | 2011

Modulational Instability Of Dust Electron Acoustic Waves In Superthermal Dusty Plasmas

Naresh Saini; Sharmin Sultana; Ioannis Kourakis

In this investigation we have studied how dust concentration and superthermality of electrons affect the instability growth rate of dust electron‐acoustic waves. Both type of dark and bright envelope solitons are observed.


Physical Review E | 2012

Nonlinear dust-acoustic solitary waves in strongly coupled dusty plasmas

S. Cousens; Sharmin Sultana; Ioannis Kourakis; Victoria V. Yaroshenko; Frank Verheest; Manfred A. Hellberg


Catalysts | 2015

Abatement of VOCs with Alternate Adsorption and Plasma-Assisted Regeneration: A Review

Sharmin Sultana; A. Vandenbroucke; Christophe Leys; Nathalie De Geyter; Rino Morent

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Ioannis Kourakis

Queen's University Belfast

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M. A. Hellberg

University of KwaZulu-Natal

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Naresh Saini

Guru Nanak Dev University

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Gianluca Sarri

Queen's University Belfast

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S. Cousens

Queen's University Belfast

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