Plasma flows from dual exploding wire arrays for the MARZ campaign on Z
ORAL
Abstract
We characterize the plasma outflows generated by a dual inverse wire array load on the Z machine (Sandia National Laboratories). The MARZ (Magnetically Ablated Reconnection on Z*) campaign uses two identical 40 mm diameter, 40 mm tall exploding wire arrays with 150, 75 m diameter Aluminum wires, driven in parallel by a 20 MA, 300 ns rise time current pulse. 3D simulations with the two-temperature resistive MHD code Gorgon were used to design the arrays that would continuously ablate plasma from the wire surface to generate radially-diverging, supersonic (MS > 5) and super-Alfvénic (MA ~ 2) magnetized plasma outflows with frozen-in magnetic flux (RM ~ 100). Anti-parallel magnetic fields advected by the outflows collide at the mid-plane to create a reconnection layer, which is used to study radiatively-cooled reconnection for the MARZ experimental campaign.
We use inductive probes, streaked visible spectroscopy (SVS), and gated optical self-emission imaging to diagnose the magnetic field, velocity, density, and temperature of the ablated plasma. Inductive probes positioned at different radii from the wires provide time- and space- resolved measurements of the magnetic field and flow velocity. The peak advected field is ~25-30 T, and the flow velocity is 100-150 km/s, consistent with simulations of the experimental setup. SVS optical spectra from 4 optical fibers positioned at different radii show well-defined Al-II and Al-III lines, which are sensitive to the electron density and temperature. These outflows collide with a 1 mm diameter glass rod, and generate a detached bow shock, the evolution of which is recorded using time-gated optical imaging. We use the opening angle of the bow shock to estimate the Mach number of the plasma flows.
We use inductive probes, streaked visible spectroscopy (SVS), and gated optical self-emission imaging to diagnose the magnetic field, velocity, density, and temperature of the ablated plasma. Inductive probes positioned at different radii from the wires provide time- and space- resolved measurements of the magnetic field and flow velocity. The peak advected field is ~25-30 T, and the flow velocity is 100-150 km/s, consistent with simulations of the experimental setup. SVS optical spectra from 4 optical fibers positioned at different radii show well-defined Al-II and Al-III lines, which are sensitive to the electron density and temperature. These outflows collide with a 1 mm diameter glass rod, and generate a detached bow shock, the evolution of which is recorded using time-gated optical imaging. We use the opening angle of the bow shock to estimate the Mach number of the plasma flows.
**SNL is managed and operated by NTESS under DOE NNSA contract DE-NA0003525. This work is supported by the NSF EAGER Award PHY2213898.
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Presenters
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Rishabh Datta
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- MIT PSFC