Charge Determination in a Magnetized Dusty Plasma
POSTER
Abstract
Dusty plasmas consist of components typically found in a plasma (electrons, ions and neutral particles) as well as micrometer sized dust particles. The dynamic properties of a dusty plasma system are governed by the dust particle charging state and the interaction of these particles with each other as well as the surrounding plasma and as a result of this, the knowledge of the exact charging state of the dust particles is very important. Theories such as OML andABR theories as well as modified versions of these have been used to theoretically determine dust charge value in the past. A molecular dynamic simulation has been created to study dust particle dynamics in the presence of a magnetic field. In a flowing system, a dust particle density gradient can build up due to the Lorentz force. This poster will show multiple theories which have been developed to utilize this gradient to determine the particle charge in different coupling regimes. Due to the interactive properties of dust particles, coupling of dust particles becomes an important factor. The coulomb coupling parameter Γ is defined as a ratio of interactive potential energy to thermal kinetic energy. Using a similar experimental system to that of a classical Hall effect, separate theories for calculation of dust charge were developed for the low coupling ("gas-like") and high coupling ("solid-like"/crystalline) regimes. These two new methods will help increase the accuracy of dust charge determination in future dusty plasma research
*National Science Foundation (PHY-1613087) National Science Foundation EPSCoR program (OIA-1655280) US Department of Energy (SC-0016330) US Department of Energy - Plasma Science Facility (SC-0019176) NASA / Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL-RSA 1571699) National Science Foundation (PHY-1740784)
Presenters
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Dylan Funk
- Los Alamos National Laboratory