Interfacial instabilities and turbulent plasma mixing in the lab and in geospace

ORAL

Abstract

Lab and space examples of turbulent instability, growth, and mixing covering a rest-frame frequency range from zero-frequency to lower-hybrid frequency have been benchmarked by laboratory experiments and applied to interpretations of space observations, as reviewed here. Local and nonlocal models of shear-driven D'Angelo, Kelvin--Helmholtz, ion-cyclotron, and lower-hybrid modes guide the laboratory explorations and predict that ion-acoustic, drift, and ion-cyclotron wave turbulence is significantly modified by velocity shear. Experimental efforts to identify mechanism by which turbulent mixing is suppressed in toroidal confinement devices when a radial electric field is externally applied suggest that the interaction between velocity shear and turbulent fluctuations include linear and nonlinear coupling between fluctuations and flows, mode coupling with a stable or damped mode, and changes in phase relationship between density and potential fluctuations.

*The WVU team was funded by DoE DE-SC-0018036, NNSA DE-NA0003874, and NSF PHY-0613238. Collaboration with G. Ganguli, W. Amatucci, J. Carroll, G. Gavrishchaka, C. Teodorescu, E. Reynolds, R. Hatakeyama, T. Kaneko, R. Schrittweiser, V. S. Mikhailenko, R. Merlino, E. Scime, C. Hidalgo, A. Melnikov, U. Losada, P. Kintner, and M. Andre is gratefully acknowledged.

Authors

  • Mark Koepke

    • West Virginia Univ, USA
    • West Virginia Univ
  • S.H. Nogami

    • West Virginia Univ
    • West Virginia Univ, USA
  • V. Demidov

    • West Virginia Univ
  • K. Gentle

    • Univ Texas - Austin