Bernstein Wave Frequency Calculator
Find electron Bernstein wave harmonic frequencies from the electron cyclotron frequency, and see how close they sit to the upper hybrid resonance.
📡 What is the Bernstein Wave Frequency Calculator?
This Bernstein wave frequency calculator finds the electron cyclotron harmonic frequencies that electron Bernstein waves cluster around, and shows how close those harmonics sit to the upper hybrid resonance. Enter the magnetic field, electron density, and a harmonic number, and it returns the harmonic frequency, the underlying cyclotron frequency, the upper hybrid frequency, and the harmonic number nearest to that resonance.
Bernstein waves, first described by Ira Bernstein in 1958, are electrostatic waves that propagate almost perpendicular to the magnetic field, with their allowed frequency bands organized around integer harmonics of the cyclotron frequency, n omega_ce. Solving their exact dispersion relation requires the plasma dispersion function, which has no closed form, so this calculator instead reports the two reference frequencies, the harmonic ladder and the upper hybrid frequency, that frame where Bernstein modes exist.
Electron Bernstein waves matter especially for overdense plasmas, where the electron density is too high for ordinary electromagnetic waves to propagate. Because Bernstein waves are electrostatic, they are not limited by that same density cutoff, making them valuable for heating and diagnosing spherical tokamaks and similar high-density devices via mode conversion near the upper hybrid layer.
This calculator is useful for plasma physics and fusion engineering students studying electron cyclotron resonance heating, wave-plasma interactions, and mode conversion physics.
📐 Formula
📖 How to Use This Calculator
Steps
💡 Example Calculations
Example 1 - Second harmonic ECH scenario
Example 2 - Tokamak-strength field, third harmonic
Example 3 - Low-field laboratory plasma, fundamental
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
🔗 Related Calculators
What is a Bernstein wave?
A Bernstein wave is an electrostatic plasma wave that propagates almost exactly perpendicular to the background magnetic field, with its frequency spectrum organized into bands clustered near integer harmonics of the electron (or ion) cyclotron frequency. It was first described by Ira Bernstein in 1958.
What is the formula this calculator uses?
It computes the n-th cyclotron harmonic f_n = n × f_ce, where f_ce = eB/(2πm_e) is the electron cyclotron frequency, along with the upper hybrid frequency f_UH = √(f_pe² + f_ce²). This is a simplified harmonic-ladder view; the exact Bernstein wave dispersion relation is more complex and has no closed form.
Why does this calculator not solve the full Bernstein wave dispersion relation?
The exact electron Bernstein wave dispersion relation involves the plasma dispersion function Z evaluated at each harmonic, an integral with no closed-form algebraic solution, normally solved numerically or read off dispersion diagrams. This calculator instead reports the underlying cyclotron harmonic ladder and upper hybrid frequency, the two reference frequencies that bound where Bernstein modes are found.
Why is the upper hybrid frequency relevant here?
Electron Bernstein waves are most efficiently mode-converted to and from ordinary electromagnetic waves (X-mode and O-mode) near the upper hybrid resonance layer, where the wave frequency matches f_UH. This calculator reports which harmonic number sits closest to f_UH so you can see how near a given harmonic falls to that conversion layer.
Why are Bernstein waves useful in fusion research?
In dense, strongly magnetized plasmas the electron density can exceed the cutoff that blocks ordinary electromagnetic heating and diagnostic waves. Electron Bernstein wave heating and emission diagnostics sidestep this cutoff entirely, since Bernstein waves are electrostatic and not limited by the same density cutoffs as electromagnetic waves, making them valuable for overdense spherical tokamaks and similar devices.
What is the electron cyclotron frequency?
It is the rate at which an electron gyrates around a magnetic field line, f_ce = eB/(2πm_e), depending only on the magnetic field strength. Bernstein wave harmonics are built directly on top of this frequency, at f_n = n × f_ce for integer n.
Does a higher harmonic number always mean a higher frequency?
Yes, since f_n = n × f_ce scales linearly with the harmonic number n for a fixed magnetic field. Higher harmonics correspond to higher frequencies, and real Bernstein wave dispersion curves exist in the frequency bands between each pair of adjacent harmonics.
What does it mean if the resonant harmonic number n_UH is not a whole number?
It means the upper hybrid frequency falls between two integer cyclotron harmonics rather than exactly on one, which is the typical, generic case. The closest integer harmonic to n_UH is where mode conversion between Bernstein and electromagnetic waves tends to be most significant.
How does electron density affect the result?
Electron density does not affect the cyclotron harmonics f_n themselves, since those depend only on B, but it strongly affects the upper hybrid frequency f_UH (through the plasma frequency f_pe) and therefore which harmonic number n_UH is closest to the upper hybrid resonance.
Are there also ion Bernstein waves?
Yes, ion Bernstein waves exist analogously, built on harmonics of the much lower ion cyclotron frequency instead of the electron cyclotron frequency. This calculator specifically covers the electron case, which uses the electron mass and charge in its cyclotron frequency formula.