Heat Dissipation and Temperature Gradients in Non-Equilibrium Microgravity Dusty Plasma

POSTER

Abstract

Classical thermodynamics shows the interaction between a system and its environment is assumed to be negligible compared to their internal energies. However, in strongly coupled systems this assumption no longer holds, and anomalous heat dissipation can arise. This means the conventional definitions of temperature, heat, and work require careful re-evaluation. Studies of microgravity dusty plasma from the PK-4 experiment on board the International Space Station have shown that strong coupling can influence heat transfer, leading to much slower relaxation to an equilibrium or steady state [1]. Dusty plasmas systems consist of neutral gas atoms, ions, electrons, and macroscopic charged particles, with these dust particles being highly charged and forming a strongly coupled system, which makes them an ideal system for the study of anomalous energy transfer. Here we construct velocity distribution functions to study temperature gradients and anomalous energy transfer using data from the PK-4 device.

[1] https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0244581

*All authors acknowledge the joint ESA / Roscosmos Experiment Plasmakristall-4 (PK-4) onboard the International Space Station. This research is funded by NSF-PHY-2308742, NSF-PHY-2308743, NSF EPSCoR FTPP OIA-2148653, U.S. DOE DE-SC-0019176, NSF-PHY-2308948, NASA JPL 1571701, NASA 80NSSC21KO381, DE-SC0021334, DE-SC0024681, and A230106S001.

Presenters

  • Ransom H May

    • Columbus State University

Authors

  • Ransom H May

    • Columbus State University
  • Jacob Fries

    • University of Alabama in Huntsville
    • University of Alabama Huntsville
  • Katherine E Notbohm

    • University of Alabama in Huntsville
  • Daniel Nyatuame

    • University of Alabama Huntsville
  • Jason Jenkins

    • University of Alabama Huntsville
  • David Robert Charles Goymer

    • Auburn University
  • Bradley Andrew

    • Auburn University
  • Diana Jiménez Martí

    • Baylor University
  • Lorin S Matthews

    • Baylor University
  • Truell W Hyde

    • Baylor University
  • Saikat Chakraborty Thakur

    • Auburn University
  • Evdokiya G Kostadinova

    • Auburn University