Plasma Diagnostic Methods: Test Charge Response in Lorentzian Dusty Plasmas

Different plasma diagnostic methods are briefly discussed, and the framework of a test charge technique is effectively used as diagnostic tool for investigating interaction potentials in Lorentzian plasma, whose constituents are the superthermal electrons and ions with negatively charged dust grains. Applying the space-time Fourier transformations to the linearized coupled Vlasov-Poisson equations, a test charge potential is derived with a modified response function due to energetic ions and electrons. For a test charge moving much slower than the dustthermal speed, there appears a short-range Debye-Hückel (DH) potential decaying exponentially with distance and a long-range far-field (FF) potential as the inverse cube of the distance from test charge. The FF potentials exhibit more localized shielding curves for low-Kappas, and smaller effective shielding length is observed in dusty plasma compared to electron-ion plasma. However, a wakefield (WF) potential is formed behind the test charge when it resonates with dust-acoustic oscillations, whereas a fast moving test charge leads to the Coulomb potential having no shielding around. It is revealed that superthermality and plasma parameters significantly alter the DH, FF, and WF potentials in space plasmas of Saturn’s E-ring, where power-law distributions can be used for energetic electrons and ions in contrast to Maxwellian dust grains.


Plasma diagnostic methods
To understand a plasma state and its characteristics, numerous experimental techniques, mechanisms, devices, theoretical models, and computational packages have been developed as diagnostic tools for measuring the plasma parameters such as the plasma electron density and temperature [1,2] as well as their spatial profiles and dynamics. These diagnostic techniques are used to adequately describe both low-temperature and high energy density plasmas. In some situations, the measurements by these techniques cause perturbations in plasmas and are termed as active diagnostic techniques, while passive ones do not perturb plasmas. Based on the degree of ionization, the plasmas can broadly be classified into cold and hot plasma states, which accordingly demand for various types of diagnostics to precisely estimate the plasma parameters for optimal understanding of the physics of plasmas. This includes both theoretical and experimental findings. The most common techniques for cold and hot plasmas (T e ≥ few keV) are the Langmuir probes in the form of planar, cylindrical, or spherical electrodes in plasmas with a goal to monitor the plasma parameters. The probes can be of several types, namely, single and/or double probes, which are used for density, temperature, and floating potential measurements. Emissive and magnetic probes work more efficiently for plasma potential measurement and wave field amplitude and phase diagnostics, respectively, while the Rogowski for antenna current measurements. There are many complications, for example, the plasma potential and density can fluctuate or drift during the time of probe measurements. In some complications, since the probe draws a large amount of currents from a plasma and perturbs the initial state of the plasma, it may lead to the erroneous measurements; even then, the Langmuir probe diagnostics are widely used and this is because of the fact that they are relatively simple to use, cheap, and give reliable values of important plasma parameters.
On the other hand, in certain plasma sources like tokamak plasmas, strong currents are generated, which give rise to various kinds of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) instabilities. For this, a magnetic probe is used, which is beneficial especially for measuring either local magnetic fields or its fluctuations not only in tokamaks but also in laser-produced plasmas (LPP). Furthermore, the amplitude of current flowing into the plasma can be estimated by integrating the induced magnetic field around the plasma column by utilizing the so-called Rogowski coil. However, in some plasmas (especially high temperature), it is not feasible to utilize material probes for determining the plasma parameter like plasma electron density. Therefore, a nonperturbing approach is needed to diagnose the plasma. In such a scenario, the electromagnetic spectrum is utilized. But the electromagnetic wave intensity must be low enough to the level that it will not result in plasma perturbation. For probing the high-density plasmas, a lower wavelength is required as a probe. This justifies the utilization of infrared radiation in tokamak and ultraviolet radiation for measuring the plasma electron density in LPP. The variation of the polarizing angle involving the beam probe in the presence of magnetic field can also be used for diagnostics of tokamak plasmas.
Interestingly, the evaluation of appropriate plasma parameters may be carried out by spectroscopy of emitted radiations as used generally from the beginning of plasma physics. This technique for emission measurements has been particularly making significant contributions over the past five decades for the fact that plasmas produced for nuclear fusion research exhibit intense emission in the X-ray region. Astrophysical applications further justify the wide interest in X-ray emission from plasmas. The phase soft X-ray (so defined due to their low penetrating power) indicates electromagnetic radiations with a wavelength in range 1Å ≤ λ ≤ 300Å (or, in terms of photon energy hv, 300 eV ≤ hν ≤ 10 keV). Hard X-rays below 1 Å are occasionally produced in plasmas for highly accelerated electrons, like runaway electrons in tokamak plasmas and suprathermal electrons in LPP [3]. The characteristics of soft X-ray spectra like line intensities, line profiles, and continuum intensities can be investigated to determine the electron densities by Stark broadening, while the ion densities from the absolute radiation intensities and ion temperatures using the Doppler broadening of spectral lines [2].
The particle measurement method is another scheme for investigating the characteristics of plasmas by using the beam of fast particles. It has received much attention in the studies of inertial confinement fusion and energy deposition in a medium driven by cluster-ion and fast heavy-ion beams, as well as in plasma accelerators and low-temperature laboratory plasmas.

Dusty plasma and test charge technique
The most common ingredient of astrospace plasmas is the dust component in addition to electrons and ions, found everywhere in earth atmospheres, in comets, in planetary rings, in interstellar clouds, in interplanetary space, in interstellar medium, etc. Dust grains may exist in the form of ice particles, metallic and dielectric materials, and are highly charged species due to different charging processes. For instance, the absorption of ambient electrons and ions on dust grain surface may lead to the negatively charged dust grains, while thermionic and secondary electron emissions as well as ultraviolet photoionization give rise to positively charged dust grains. Thus, a multispecies dusty plasma can be assumed as more complex plasma than conventional electron-ion plasma, for dust size, mass, and charge variations. Being an abundant component of the space and industrial plasmas [4,5], dusty plasma has always attracted lots of interests for studying new distinct features of plasma modes [6,7] with a static and dynamic background of dust grains both analytically and experimentally [8][9][10]. Numerous linear and nonlinear [viz., solitons, shocks, vortices, etc.] dusty modes and associated instabilities are investigated using the frameworks of perturbative and nonperturbative schemes.
The behavior of charged particles in plasmas can be described by the wellknown fluid and kinetic theories [4,11], essentially helpful for studying the basic properties of plasma waves and instabilities, depending strongly on the observed phenomena. Laboratory plasmas have effectively been modeled by fluid description, where charged fluids of plasma species are assumed in temporal and spatial configurations. But, it has been observed that fluid theory does not account for velocity space coordinate and is insufficient to study the wave phenomena in nonequilibrium plasmas, where particle distributions show significant deviations from the equilibrium states. Hence, fluid theory is unable to explain the wave-particle interactions that could lead to collisionless Landau damping phenomenon and many other interesting features of collective modes and instabilities. Conversely, kinetic theory adequately describes the physical phenomena in real time and phase space configurations, providing all information about plasma waves, instabilities, plasma equilibrium, Landau damping rate, etc.
Test charge techniques [12,13] can be utilized to study the shielding of test charges in collisional [14] and turbulent [15] plasmas, the electric field [16], and farfield potential of a test charge in a nonuniform magnetoplasma [17], the wake-field excitations in charge fluctuating dusty plasmas [18], the two-body correlations [19], the energy loss of test charges [20], etc. If a test particle is projected into the plasma with a constant speed, its charge density is coupled with the plasma charge density by the space charge effects. Consequently, the test charge is screened by a cloud of opposite sign charges leading to the short-range Debye-Hückel (DH) potential. Of course, the speed of test charge significantly matters in plasmas when it is considered with respect to thermal speeds of plasma species. The interaction potentials and energy loss of charged particles have been recognized in many research areas, for example, in ion-cluster interaction with condensed matter [21,22], in inertial confinement fusion [23][24][25], in particle acceleration [26], in low-temperature laboratory plasmas [27,28], and in dense plasmas for heavy-ion energy deposition [29].
Montgomery et al. [13] employed the test charge technique to obtain far-field potential distribution around a test charge, which decays as the inverse cube of the distance from test charge in electron-ion Maxwellian plasmas. Subsequent investigations of shielded potentials have been phenomenally influenced by the ionic motion [30], electron-electron collisions [14,31], and plasma turbulence [15]. The electrostatic potential [32] due to small and large test charge velocities has been investigated to display the excitation of long-range wakefields in Maxwellian plasmas. Shivamoggi and Mulser [33] examined the effects of magnetic field, collisions, and plasma inhomogeneity on the potential due to slowly and rapidly moving test charges [17,34], and Lakshmi et al. [35] discussed the Debye shielding phenomenon in a dusty plasma by considering the Boltzmannian electrons and ions with cold negative dust grains. It was revealed that plasma parameters significantly alter the characteristics of small and large amplitude potentials. Later, Shukla [36] reported the FF potential for a slowly moving test charge in a Maxwellian dusty plasma and showed the impact of dust-charge variation on the dipole-like FF potential. Moreover, oscillatory wake-field can be excited behind the test charge [37] in a collisionless unmagnetized plasma with Maxwellian electrons and ions. Nambu et al. [38] extended this work to dusty plasmas and explained the resonant phenomenon of DA waves with a test charge, resulting in the long-range WF potential. Later, Shukla and Rao [39] analyzed the WF, DH, and FF potentials of test charge in a colloidal Maxwellian plasma accounting for the streaming ions and dust grains. It was found that external magnetic field and ion-streaming effects [40,41] strongly affect the positive/negative potential regions in plasmas. To explore the effects of two-body correlations, dust-charge perturbations and dustneutral collisions, various geometries have been designed for propagating test charges [18][19][20] in an unmagnetized Maxwellian dusty plasma. In all above investigations, the plasma particles are described by the Maxwellian distribution function.
The shielding phenomenon is one of the main objectives of this chapter to unfold many intrinsic properties of the Lorentzian space dusty plasma, which discerns it from the standard Maxwellian plasmas. It plays a key role in setting up the basic criteria for Lorentzian dusty plasmas. Any plasma medium can physically be polarized by the test charge to give rise to perfect screening if thermal agitations are absent in the plasma system. Conversely, an imperfect shielding occurs if the plasma particles get enough thermal energy to escape from the edge of screening cloud. The interaction potentials caused by the test charge are not only strongly influenced by different test charge speeds in comparison with the thermal speeds but also lead to the possibility of dust crystallization and dust coagulation in space Lorentzian dusty plasmas.

Power-law Lorentzian distribution function (df)
In some circumstances, the behavior of plasma particles cannot be described by the usual Maxwellian distribution function (df) but often modeled by the powerlaw df. When all or some of the plasma particles move faster than their thermal speeds, the plasma particles are known as superthermal/suprathermal species, showing high energy and velocity tails in the distribution. They are mostly accelerated by wave-particle interactions, modulational instabilities and Langmuir turbulence [42], beam-plasma interactions [43], solar wind where type III solar radio emissions occurs [44], intense microwave-plasma interactions [45], ionospheric heating experiments [46], etc. Recognizing the role of superthermal energetic particles in plasmas, the wave dynamics and instabilities need to be re-investigated with a power-law df that gives a better fit to empirical data from space plasmas. A 3D isotropic Kappa-df [47] for superthermal particles can be expressed as The normalization constant and effective thermal speed are denoted by 1=2 , respectively. The symbol Γ indicates the Gamma function, and v s and n s0 are the velocity and equilibrium number density, whereas T s (m s ) stands for the temperature (mass) of the sth species (s ¼ e for electrons and i for positive ions). The effective thermal speed θ Ts is always realistic in the limit κ s > 3=2, where κ s is the spectral index showing the deviation from the Maxwellian df. Figure 1 displays the normalized Kappa-df [as given by Eq. (1)] for the electrons as function of normalized electron speed with varying κ e -index both in 2D and contour plots. See that superthermal electrons exhibit high energy tails at κ e ¼ 2, 4, and 10 in distribution curves, which tend to the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution curve for κ e ! ∞: Therefore superthermality effects are only significant for low values of Kappa, and for its infinite values, the Kappa-df exactly converges to the Maxwell-df hi : It may be noted from contours (see Figure 1(b)) that light-colored regions correspond to more electrons at low speeds, and while moving toward the dense-colored regions, the number of electrons decreases but comparatively has high speeds. In 1968, for the first time, Vasyliunas [47] pointed out the implications of Kappa-df by fitting empirical data from solar wind and showed the significance of low values of electron spectral index, that is, κ s¼e $ 2 À 4: The effects of high energy tails have significantly modified the dispersive properties of waves and instabilities [48,49] in Lorentzian plasmas. Recently, Ali and Eliasson [50] investigated the impact of suprathermal hot electrons on the electrostatic potential of slowly moving test charge in a two-temperature electron plasma and extended the model for Lorentzian dusty plasmas [51].

Kinetic model for Lorentzian dusty plasmas
To compute the potential distributions around a test charge, we consider a collisionless Lorentzian dusty plasma, containing the suprathermal electrons and ions with negatively charged dust grains following the Maxwell-df. The plasma is also assumed to be field-free in the sense that there is no external electric or magnetic field (viz., E 0 ¼ 0 ¼ B 0 Þ, so that the equilibrium electrostatic potential ϕ 0 ¼ 0: The quasi-neutrality condition at equilibrium demands n e0 ¼ n i0 À Z d0 n d0 ,w h e r eZ d0 being the equilibrium dust-charge state and n j0 denote the particle number densities of the jth species [ j equals s ¼ e, i ðÞ for Kappa-distributed electrons and ions while j ¼ d for negatively charged dust grains]. In this model, all the dust grains are assumed to be spherical in shape with constant size of radius r d and mass m d .
The Lorentzian dusty plasma in the presence of a test charge can be described by the following linearized coupled set of Vlasov-Poisson equations: and where E 1 ¼À∇ϕ 1 ðÞ is the induced electric field with perturbed potential ϕ 1 , q d0 ¼ÀZ d0 e ðÞ is the charge of the negative dust grains, and q s ¼Àe, e ðÞ being the charge of electrons and positive ions. . Also note that test particle has a charge q T which moves with a constant velocity v T along the zaxis in a Lorentzian dusty plasma.
Taking space-time Fourier analysis of Eqs. (2), (3), and (4), we obtain the Fourier transformed potential in this form The modified longitudinal dielectric constant can be defined by where ω k ðÞbeing the angular frequency (wave number) and ω pj ¼ 4πq 2 j n j0 =m j 1=2 is the plasma oscillation frequency. It is important to mention that if Lorentzian dusty plasma does not contain any test charge, viz., q T ¼ 0, then Eq. (5) simply implies that D k, ω ðÞ ¼ 0, showing a modified linear dispersion relation of electrostatic waves to account for superthermal electrons and ions. However, the inverse Fourier analysis of Eq. (5) leads to the standard form of electrostatic potential due to a test charge in a dusty plasma [11,32].
The dielectric constant in terms of dielectric susceptibilities viz:,  [48] and for Maxwellian dust grains [52], respectively, can be given by ,I m C s ðÞ > 0, and To proceed further, we shall consider two limiting cases of Eq. (8) by imposing certain limitations on the test charge speed in comparison with the thermal and acoustic speeds and simplify the interaction potentials [as given by Eq. (7)] in Lorentzian dusty plasmas.

Slow moving test charge response
For a slow test charge propagation in a Lorentzian dusty plasma, we assume that test charge speed v T ðÞ is much slower than the dust thermal speed v Td ðÞ : As a result, the test charge is shielded by all the plasma species, for example, electrons, ions, and dust grains. Since mass of the dust grains is larger than the mass of electrons and ions, therefore the dust thermal speed is much smaller than the electron and ion thermal speeds. Thus, imposing the inequalities v T ≪ v Td ⋘θ Ts , we consider only small argument expansions, that is, |C s |≪ 1 and |C d |≪ 1, in the plasma dispersion functions to obtain a simplified expression for dielectric constant. The inverse of the latter eventually yields the following result The modified effective Debye length λ Dκ can be simplified in this form with superthermality parameters attributed to electrons and ions as c κe ¼ 2κ e À 1 2κ e À 3 and c κi ¼ 2κ i À 1 2κ i À 3 : The usual Debye length in electron-ion plasma is denoted by λ 0 ¼ T e =4πn 0 e 2 ðÞ 1=2 with n 0 ¼ n i0 n e0 þ Z d0 n d0 and μ ¼ cos θ k ðÞ representing the angle between the vectors k and v T . For Maxwellian plasmas, the superthermality parameters c κe,i ! 1 as long as κ e,i ! ∞, implying that the effective shielding length exactly coincides with the earlier result [35] for static cold dust grains. It may be noticed from Eq. (9) that the inverse of dielectric constant is significantly influenced by the dust Landau damping rate [13]. The importance of the latter was first pointed out [13] in 1968, and it was suggested that if a test charge moves slowly in comparison to the dust thermal speed, the dust Landau damping term appearing in Eq. (9) cannot be ignored. For a static test charge, we set v T ¼ 0 and insert Eq. (9) into Eq. (7) to derive the short-range DH potential [53,54] where r jj¼ ρ 2 þ ξ 2 ÀÁ 1=2 is the distance from the test charge to an observer in terms of radial and axial distances ρ and ξ ¼ z ðÞ , respectively. For numerical analyses, we can choose the data from the dusty plasma near Saturn's E ring, cited in Refs. [55][56][57][58] and many references therein. The data essentially corresponds to the Radio and Plasma Wave Science (RPWS) instruments onboard the Cassini spacecraft, containing the plasma parameters, such as  Table 1 that for infinite values of the spectral indices, that is, κ e,i ! ∞, the superthermality parameters c κe,i ðÞ tend to unity, implying that the effective shielding length exactly coincides with the previous results [35] for static cold dust grains. However, the variation due to superthermal electrons and ions is shown in three different combinations (see Table 1) to affect the normalized values of the effective Debye length and DH potential almost 4 digits beyond the decimal point. At lower Kappa-values, the impact is relatively enhanced and in turn, suprathermal ions more efficiently modify the effective shielding length and DH potential as compared to suprathermal electrons because the ions may take more time to attain the Maxwellian equilibrium due to their larger mass compared to electrons.
The effect of dust concentration [denoted through the parameter η ¼ n d0 =n 0 ðÞ ]is shown on the contours of normalized effective shielding length [as given by Eq. (10)] in Figure 2 for (a) η ¼ 0 and (b) η ¼ 10 À3 as function of electron-to-ion temperature ratio in the range 1 ≤ T e =T i ≤ 6 and electron spectral index 1:6 ≤ κ e ≤ 5 at near-Maxwellian ions κ i ¼ 100. Since the speed of the test charge is much lower than the dust thermal speed (viz., v T ≪ v Td ), the test charge is therefore screened by all the plasma species, viz., the electrons, ions, and dust grains, hence effectively modifying the shielding length. The effective shielding length is shown to be decreased in the dusty plasma in comparison with traditional electron-ion plasma and is strongly influenced by the suprathermal tails of electrons. The impact of the superthermal electrons at lower Kappa values is more effective in the case of electron-ion plasma than dusty plasma. In the plots, one can easily observe that light-colored regions correspond to higher values of the effective shielding length while dense-colored regions determine the lower values of the shielding length. However, in Figure 2  κ e ¼ 100: It may be noted that due to the variation of electron-to-ion temperature ratio against the ion spectral index, the magnitudes of effective shielding length become smaller at lower values of κ i than the case of κ e : However, the effective shielding length approaches to the maximum value in the limit T e ≃ T i and decreases by enhancing the electron-to-ion temperature ratios.

Short-range DH and long-range FF potentials
To study short and long-range shielded potentials of a slowly moving test charge along the z-axis in a Lorentzian dusty plasma, we use Eq. (9) into Eq. (7) and spherical polar coordinates, as v T ¼ 0, 0, v T ðÞ , k ¼ k sin θ k cos φ k , k sin θ k sin φ k , k cos θ k ðÞ , and r ¼ r sin θ r cos φ r , r sin θ r sin φ r , r cos θ r ðÞ to finally obtain the total potential ϕ 1 r, t The first part of Eq. (11) corresponds to the short-range Debye-Hückel (DH) potential, which accounts for the short distances between the test charge and observer, whereas the second part represents the long-range far-field potential in the limit r ≫ λ Dκ decaying as the inverse cube of the distance to the test charge. Here r ¼ ρ 2 þ ξ 2 ÀÁ 1=2 is the distance from the test charge to observer with radial and axial positions ρ and ξ ¼ z À v T t ðÞ , respectively. When κ e,i ! ∞, the effective Debye length λ Dκ approaches to λ D with c κe,i ¼ 1, and consequently Eq. (11) exactly coincides with the earlier result [36] in the limit cos γ ðÞ¼ξ=r, having null dustcharge fluctuations. In Figure 3, the magnitude of the effective shielding length varies against the specific ranges of the electron concentration μ e ðÞ and dust concentration η ðÞfor changing the (a) electron-to-ion temperature ratios T e T i ¼ 1, 2, 4, 8 ðÞ at near-Maxwellian electrons and ions κ e,i ¼ 100 and (b) electron-to-dust temperature ratios T e T d ¼ 10, 15, 20, 25 ðÞ with fixed T e T i ¼ 2 for Kappa-distributed electrons and ions (i.e., κ e,i ¼ 1:6), respectively. Note that for an electron-ion plasma, the effective shielding length is approached to unity [35] as the maximum value for isothermal case T e T i ¼ 1 (black dotted curve) (see Figure 3(a)), which then decreases with respect to the electron concentration. For non-isothermal values, that is, T e T i ¼ 2 (blue dashed curve), 4 (red solid curve), and 8 (black solid curve), the strength of the effective shielding however reduces in terms of fraction showing no more dominant impact of the electron concentration. In the presence of dust component, the effective shielding length is reduced as compared to the electron-ion plasma and clearly depends on the electron-to-dust temperature ratios T e T d ¼ 10, 15, 20, 25 ðÞ at Z d0 ¼ 300, as can be seen in Figure 3(b).
The variation of the normalized DH potentialφ DH caused by a slowly moving test charge is displayed against the normalized axial distanceξ for varying the dust concentration η ¼ 10 À3 ,1 :2 Â 10 À3 , and 1:4 Â 10 À3 in Figure 4 for (a) non-Maxwellian electrons and ions, as well as (b) near-Maxwellian electrons and ions. The DH potentials fastly reduce with a variation of dust concentration and attain large magnitudes in the near-Maxwellian case at κ e,i ¼ 100 compared to non-Maxwellian case at κ e,i ¼ 1:6: Figure 5 exhibits how suprathermal electrons and ions modify the profiles of long-range FF potential (φ FF Þ caused by a slow test charge moving with speed v T ¼ 0:02v Td . For small values of electron spectral index κ e ¼ 1:6, 1:8 ðÞ , the shielded FF potentials are more localized than the case at near-Maxwellian electrons for κ e ¼ 100 (see the red solid curve in Figure 5(a)). However, the magnitudes of the FF potential are comparatively decreased in Figure 5(b) because of the strong contribution of suprathermal ions.

Resonating test charge response
To examine the resonant interaction of a test charge with DA waves, we first simply derive the dielectric constant of the DA waves using the limit v Td ≪ ω=k ≪ θ Te , θ Ti in Eq. (8). We therefore consider the small and large argument expansions C s ≪ 1 and C d ≫ 1 of the plasma dispersion functions. On DA scales, the inertia is mainly provided by the negatively charged dust grains and restoring force by the pressures of superthermal inertialess electrons and ions for maintaining the propagation of DA waves. In typical laboratory plasmas, the frequency of DA waves is often below the dust plasma oscillation frequency in the range of 1-100 Hz. Thus, the modified dielectric constant for a Lorentzian dusty plasma takes the following form The effective Debye length now gets a new form λ 0 Note that dust-charge fluctuations are also ignored here because the characteristic damping rate attributed to dust charge fluctuations is much smaller than the collisional and Landau damping rates. The reciprocal of Eq. (12) can be simplified as with This is the DA resonance frequency with DA speed C D ¼ ω pd λ 0 ÀÁ . For long wavelength limit kλ 0 ≪ B κ , the DA frequency reduces to ω D ¼ kC D = ffiffiffiffiffi B κ p in the Lorentzian dusty plasma, while in the short wavelength limit kλ 0 ≫ B κ , the frequency simply approaches to the dust plasma oscillation frequency ω D ≃ ω pd . The in Eq. (13) identifies the dynamical effects of dust grains, which may lead to an oscillatory WF potential strongly depending upon whether the product k Á v T is smaller or larger than ω D .

Short-range DH and long-range WF potentials
For static or slowly moving test charge in a Lorentzian dusty plasma, its potential distributions are found spherically symmetric both in the axial and radial directions. Consequently, the DH and FF shielded potentials are appropriately solved with spherical polar coordinates. However, if the test charge moves with finite speed in a specific direction along the z-axis, the resonant interaction of test charge with the DA wave leads to the asymmetric distribution of potential in the form of WF behind the test charge. The plasma model is then preferably solved in cylindrical coordinates. Thus, following the standard techniques [37,38,40] for DH and WF potentials, we make use of Eq. (13) into Eq. (7) to finally arrive at where ξ ¼ r ∥ À v T t ÀÁ is the axial distance between the test charge and observer. The first part on the right hand side of Eq. (15) shows the contribution of modified DH potential and the second part corresponds to oscillatory WF potential accounting for the suprathermal electrons and ions in a Lorentzian dusty plasma. For v T > C D and cos ω pd ξ=v T ffiffiffiffiffi B κ p ÀÁ < 0, the WF potential becomes attractive [40] and dominates over the repulsive DH potential because the latter decreases rapidly beyond the shielding cloud. An oscillatory WF potentialφ WF ¼ ϕ WF λ 0 =q T ÀÁ of a test charge moving with speed v T ¼ 0:2C D is shown along the axial directionξ as a function of spectral indices κ e and κ i in Figure 6(a) and (b), respectively. Observe that the amplitude of the WF potential increases as the superthermal indices κ e and κ i increase at fixed η ¼ 10 À3 and Z d0 ¼ 300. Moreover, the wakefield damps behind the test charge a bit earlier as shown in Figure 6(b) due to the strong dependence of suprathermal ions on the effective shielding length in comparison with the suprathermal electrons. The impact of electron-to-ion temperature ratio is also examined on the profiles of WF and DH potentials as a function of axial distanceξ  with fixed radial distance ρ ¼ 0:54λ 0 and v T ¼ 0:2C D as can be seen in Figure 7(a) and (b), respectively. It is important to examine that electron-to-ion temperature ratio suppresses the magnitudes of the WF and DH potentials at low values of κ e,i ¼ 1:6 in the Lorentzian dusty plasma (Figures 6 and 7).

Fast moving test charge response
In this case, the test charge is assumed to be moving much faster than all the plasma species (viz., the electrons, ions and negatively charged dust grains). Consequently, Eq. (6) can be expressed in 1D form to finally arrive at Dk , k:v T ðÞ ≃ 1in the limits v T |≫ ku j and ω ¼ k:v T . Thus, the test charge potential (7) simply leads to the Coulomb potential It is now clear that if the test charge is moving very fast, then there is no shielding around it in the Lorentzian dusty plasma.

Conclusion
To conclude, we have briefly discussed different plasma diagnostic techniques and specifically investigated the novel features of interaction potentials caused by a test charge moving with constant velocity v T along the z-axis in a collisionless unmagnetized Lorentzian dusty plasma. For this purpose, the linearized coupled Vlasov-Poisson equations are employed to model suprathermal electrons and ions with Kappa-df, as well as negatively charged dust grains with Maxwell-df, respectively. After applying the space-time Fourier transformations, an electrostatic potential is obtained with a modified dielectric constant. For taking the test charge speed much smaller than the dust thermal speed in a Lorentzian dusty plasma, we then express the total potential distribution in terms of short-range Debye-Hückel (DH) and long-range far-field potentials. The DH potential exponentially decays with distance, whereas FF potential decreases as the inverse cube of the distance. Both the potentials are substantially influenced by the plasma and superthermality parameters. However, a resonating test charge with DA oscillations introduces the long-range WF potential excitations behind the test charge in Lorentzian dusty plasmas. A Coulomb potential is obtained when the test charge is moving very fast compared to plasma species, and there is no shielding around it in the Lorentzian dusty plasma.
Vladimirov and Nambu [40] have already utilized the idea of WF potential for making new materials by attracting the same polarity dust grains in dusty plasmas. The physics of attractive forces between the negatively charged dust grains is completely analogous to that of Cooper pairing of electrons in superconductors [59]. The dust particle physically polarizes the plasma medium and creates attractive potential regions, where positive ions from collective interaction of DA waves can be focused. This may in turn lead to the possibility for dust crystallization and dust coagulation in both laboratory and space dusty plasmas. during discussions on dusty plasmas, and acknowledges the partial financial assistance from USTC, Hefei, China, and ICTP, Trieste, Italy, for making his visits feasible in 2018 and 2019, respectively. Professor Y. Al-Hadeethi also acknowledges the technical support of the Deanship of Scientific Research (DSR), King Abdulaziz University, Saudi Arabia.