The purpose of this book is to illustrate the fundamental concepts of
complexity and complex behavior and the best methods to characterize
this behavior by means of their applications to some current research
topics from within the fields of fusion, earth and solar plasmas. In
this sense, it is a departure from the many books already available that
discuss general features of complexity.
The book is divided in two parts. In the first part the most important
properties and features of complex systems are introduced, discussed and
illustrated. The second part discusses several instances of possible
complex phenomena in magnetized plasmas and some of the analysis tools
that were introduced in the first part are used to characterize the
dynamics in these systems. A list of problems is proposed at the end of
each chapter.
This book is intended for graduate and post-graduate students with a
solid college background in mathematics and classical physics, who
intend to work in the field of plasma physics and, in particular, plasma
turbulence. It will also be of interest to senior scientists who have so
far approached these systems and problems from a different perspective
and want a new fresh angle.