Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 March 2009
We study nonlinear self-interactions including modulational instability in the case of a plane electromagnetic pulse propagating through a magnetized cold plasma at an arbitrary oblique angle to the external magnetic field. For intended applications to pulsar magnetospheres, the magnetic field is so large that both the electron- and ion-cyclotron frequencies are enormous compared with the plasma frequency or the frequency ω of the wave itself. The plasma is assumed to contain two singly charged species, either electrons and positrons or electrons and ions. (No approximation is made with respect to the mass ratio.) We restrict ourselves to the case eE0/mω ≪ 1 (i.e. the wave amplitude E0 excites the electrons to weakly, but not fully, relativistic velocities). We consider a pulse whose linear polarization is in the plane of the wave vector and the magnetic field. (The orthogonal polarization is purely electromagnetic, and induces no motion along magnetic field lines.) The pulse is assumed to be modulated along the direction of the group velocity vector. We show, using a self-consistent multiple-scales solution, that the envelope obeys the nonlinear Schrödinger equation, and from the coefficients of this equation we derive the conditions for modulational instability. Computation of the nonlinear coefficients requires detailed consideration of ponderomotive, relativistic and harmonic effects, all of which, in the ‘weakly relativistic’ case considered here, enter at the same order in the approximation scheme. Unlike the case of propagation parallel to a strong magnetic field, in oblique propagation we find a wide parameter range for modulational instability and soliton formation on time scales appropriate for pulsar micropulses.