Landau damping–the collisionless decay of plasma waves — is investigated using Fourier spectral methods applied to the one-dimensional Vlasov–Poisson system. We explore the transition from linear Landau damping to nonlinear wave–particle interactions, including particle trapping and the formation of Bernstein-Greene-Kruskal (BGK) modes. A high-accuracy Fourier spectral discretization combined with time-splitting integration is employed to resolve fine phase-space structures. The study validates the numerical method against analytical linear theory, demonstrating exponential damping of small-amplitude plasma oscillations. At higher amplitudes, nonlinear effects manifest as phase-space vortices and reduced damping, consistent with classical wave–particle trapping theory. Spectral diagnostics in wavenumber and velocity space are used to quantify the redistribution of energy from the electric field into the particle distribution. The results show the emergence of higher harmonic modes, the saturation of Landau damping, and the establishment of nonlinearly sustained oscillations. These findings underscore the effectiveness of Fourier spectral techniques for capturing intricate plasma dynamics without numerical dissipation. Future extensions to multi-dimensional and electromagnetic plasma waves are discussed.
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