Experimental Study of Magnetic Field Effects on Cylindrically Convergent Plasma Flows

ORAL

Abstract

In this talk, we present initial measurements of cylindrically converging plasma flows (ne~ 1018 cm-3, vr ~ 20 kms-1) in the presence of dynamically significant magnetic fields (B ~ 1 T). To understand the effect of magnetic fields, we also show equivalent experiments in a purely hydrodynamic regime.

All experiments presented in this talk were performed on the MAGPIE pulsed power generator at Imperial College (1.4 MA peak current, 240 ns rise time). The flows were produced via plasma ablation from additively manufactured targets driven by soft X-rays produced by a Z-pinch, assuring smooth and uniform plasma1. Diagnostics deployed during the experiments included laser interferometry, Thomson scattering, and fast-frame imaging.

The initial diameter of the converging plasma flow was ~ 10 mm, significantly larger than the resistive diffusion length that is expected to be ~ 1 mm for these plasmas. As such, these experiments can be used to study amplification of B fields via flux compression2, resistive diffusion effects, and potentially modification of hydrodynamic instability growth in the presence of B fields3.

[1] J.W.D. Halliday, Phys. Plasmas 29, 042107 (2022)

[2] J.R. Davies, Phys. Plasmas 24, 062701 (2017)

[3] C. A. Walsh, HEDP 101103 (2024)

*Supported by EPSRC and First Light Fusion under the AMPLIFI Prosperity Partnership, Sandia National Laboratories, AFOSR under FA8655-23-1-7062, the NNSA under DOE DE-NA0004148.

Presenters

  • Jergus Strucka

    • Imperial College London

Authors

  • Jergus Strucka

    • Imperial College London
  • Katherine Marrow

    • Imperial College London
  • Stefano Merlini

    • Imperial College London
  • Lee G Suttle

    • Imperial College London
  • Thomas R Mundy

    • Imperial College London
  • Jeremy P Chittenden

    • Imperial College London
  • Simon N Bland

    • Imperial College London
  • Sergey V Lebedev

    • Imperial College London