Differentially rotating HED plasma experiments on the MAGPIE pulsed-power generator
ORAL
Abstract
We present results from a laboratory platform capable of producing differentially rotating plasmas aiming to study angular momentum transport in conditions relevant to those astrophysical disks and jets. A 1.4 MA electrical current pulse drives 8 radial plasma jets carrying angular momentum relative to the setup's common axis. When the jets merge around the common axis of the experiment, a hollow rotating plasma column is formed and a hollow, highly collimated jet is ejected along the axis of the system. Laser interferometry used to determine the radial density profile provides measurements of the density depletion at the jet axis. Optical Thomson scattering measurements reveal the jet spins at \textasciitilde 10 km/s with Ti \textasciitilde 70 eV, Te \textasciitilde 30 eV, resulting in a subsonic M \textasciitilde 0.6 rotational motion, whereas estimates from XUV images indicate a supersonic axial flow M \textasciitilde 3. Furthermore, Re \textasciitilde 10$^{\mathrm{5}}$, Rm \textasciitilde 10$^{\mathrm{2}}$, hence Pm \textless \textless 1 putting our experiment in the regime relevant to young stellar object disks and jets. Supported by US Department of Energy Awards DE-F03-02NA00057 {\&} DE-SC-0001063 and the Royal Astronomical Society. V. Valenzuela-Villaseca is funded by the Imperial College President's PhD Scholarships.
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