What is Plasma?
Plasma is often called the "Fourth State of Matter",
the other three being solid, liquid and gas. A plasma
is a distinct state of matter containing a significant
number of electrically charged particles, a number sufficient
to affect its electrical properties and behavior. In
addition to being important in many aspects of our daily
lives, plasmas are estimated to constitute more than
99 percent of the visible universe.
In an ordinary gas each atom contains an equal number
of positive and negative charges; the positive charges
in the nucleus are surrounded by an equal number of
negatively charged electrons, and each atom is electrically
"neutral". A gas becomes a plasma when the
addition of heat or other energy causes a significant
number of atoms to release some or all of their electrons.
The remaining parts of those atoms are left with a positive
charge, and the detached negative electrons are free
to move about. Those atoms and the resulting electrically
charged gas are said to be "ionized". When
enough atoms are ionized to significantly affect the
electrical characteristics of the gas, it is a plasma.
In many cases interactions between the charged particles
and the neutral particles are important in determining
the behavior and usefulness of the plasma. The type
of atoms in a plasma, the ratio of ionized to neutral
particles and the particle energies all result in a
broad spectrum of plasma types, characteristics and
behaviors. These unique behaviors cause plasmas to be
useful in a large and growing number of important applications
in our lives.
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