Drift-Alfven Fluctuations and Transport in Multiple Interacting Magnetized Electron Temperature Filaments

ORAL

Abstract

Steep thermal gradients in a magnetized plasma can induce a variety of spontaneous low frequency excitations such drift-Alfven waves and vortices. We present results from basic experiments on heat transport in magnetized plasmas with multiple heat sources in close proximity. The setup consists of three biased probe-mounted CeB6 crystal cathodes that inject low energy electrons along a strong magnetic field into a pre-existing cold afterglow plasma forming three electron temperature filaments. A triangular spatial pattern is chosen for the thermal sources and multiple axial and transverse probe measurements allow for determination of the cross-field mode patterns and axial filament length. When the three sources are placed within a few collisionless electron skin depths a non-azimuthally symmetric wave pattern emerges due to the overlap of drift-Alfven modes forming around each filament. This leads to enhanced cross-field transport from chaotic mixing (E×B) and profile collapse of the inner triangular region and steepened thermal gradients in the outer triangular region which spontaneously generates quasi-symmetric higher azimuthal mode number drift-Alfven fluctuations. In addition a sheared azimuthal flow is present from the emissive cathode that modifies the Alfvenic eigenmodes.

*This work was supported by NSERC, Canada and was performed at the Basic Plasma Science Facility supported by DOE and NSF, with major facility instrumentation developed via an NSF award AGS-9724366.

Authors

  • Richard Sydora

    • University of Alberta
  • Scott Karbashewski

    • University of Alberta
  • Bart Van Compernolle

    • UCLA
  • Matt Poulos

    • UCLA