Absorption of electromagnetic waves by the dust particles in a plasma has been studied based on a Mie-Debye scattering mode. The longitudinal field of the Debye scattering has been derived and the wave energy loss from it has been calculated. It is shown that the lower the temperature of the plasma is and the higher the density of the plasma is, the larger the absorption cross section will be due to the longitudinal scattering. For the low frequency waves the electromagnetic waves scattered in a dusty plasma are mainly in the form of Debye scattering. In this case the energy loss due to the longitudinal scattering will affect the wave propagation seriously.
The electromagnetic propagation through an inhomogeneous magnetized plasma slab is studied using the Z-transform formulation of the Finite-Difference Time-Domain(FDTD) method. The direction of electromagnetic propagation is parallel to the biasing magnetic filed. To validate the Z-transform algorithm, the reflection and transmission coefficients for the right-hand circularly polarized wave of the homogeneous magnetized plasma slab are computed by means of discrete Fourier transform. The comparison between the reflection and transmission coefficients of the homogeneous plasma slab and analytical values indicates that Z-transform algorithm is very accurate. When the plasma frequency varies according to the square root and parabolic relations, the reflection and transmission coefficients of the inhomogeneous magnetized plasma slab are computed.
This paper focuses on a composite medium structure that exhibits simultan- eously negative values of effective permeability and permittivity, and our experimental study in an anechoic chamber. The experiment results show that the artificial medium, based on a periodic array of interspaced conducting nonmagnetic split ring resonators and continuous metallic wires, can have a simultaneously negative effective permeability and permittivity within a frequency region in the microwave regime under certain linearly polarized waves.
SUI Qiang1, 2 & LI Fang1 1. Institute of Electronics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100080, China