Experiments on the Propagation of Plasma Filaments in VTF

Duration: 39 mins 51 secs
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Description: Egedal, J (MIT)
Thursday 29 July 2010, 14:00-14:40
 
Created: 2010-08-11 14:09
Collection: Gyrokinetics in Laboratory and Astrophysical Plasmas
Publisher: Isaac Newton Institute
Copyright: Egedal, J
Language: eng (English)
Credits:
Author:  Egedal, J
Producer:  Tim Cooper
Editor:  Steve Greenham
 
Abstract: We investigate experimentally the motion and structure of isolated plasma filaments propagating through neutral gas. Plasma filaments, or "blobs," arise from turbulent fluctuations in a range of plasmas. Our experimental geometry is toroidally symmetric, and the blobs expand to a larger major radius under the influence of a vertical electric field. The electric field, which is caused by ÑB and curvature drifts in a 1/R magnetic field, is limited by collisional damping on the neutral gas. The blob's electrostatic potential structure and the resulting E×B flow field give rise to a vortex pair and a mushroom shape, which are consistent with nonlinear plasma simulations. We observe experimentally this characteristic mushroom shape. We also find that the blob propagation velocity is inversely proportional to the neutral density and decreases with time as the blob cools [1]. [1] Katz N, Egedal J, et al, (2008) Phys. Rev. Lett. 101, 015003.
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