Quantum methods are not yet very common in plasma modeling. They can be used to solve unique modeling problems; like situations where other methods do not apply. They involve the application of
quantum field theory to plasma. In these cases, the electric and
magnetic fields made by particles are modeled like a
field; A web of forces. Particles that move, or are removed from the population push and pull on this web of forces, this field. The mathematical treatment for this involves
Lagrangian mathematics.
Collisional-radiative modeling is used to calculate quantum state densities and the emission/absorption properties of a plasma. This plasma radiation physics is critical for the diagnosis and simulation of astrophysical and nuclear fusion plasma. It is one of the most general approaches and lies between the extrema of a local thermal equilibrium and a coronal picture. In a local thermal equilibrium the population of excited states is distributed according to a Boltzmann distribution. However, this holds only if densities are high enough for an excited hydrogen atom to undergo many collisions such that the energy is distributed before the radiative process sets in. In a coronal picture the timescale of the radiative process is small compared to the collisions since densities are very small. The use of the term coronal equilibrium is ambiguous and may also refer to the non-transport ionization balance of recombination and ionization. The only thing they have in common is that a coronal equilibrium is not sufficient for tokamak plasma. ==Commercial plasma physics modeling codes==