Caltech water-ice dusty plasma: preliminary results

POSTER

Abstract

A water-ice dusty plasma laboratory experiment has begun operation at Caltech. As in Ref. [1], a 1-5 watt parallel-plate 13.56 MHz rf discharge plasma has LN2-cooled electrodes that cool the neutral background gas to cryogenic temperatures. However, instead of creating water vapor by in-situ deuterium-oxygen bonding [1], here the neutral gas is argon and water vapor is added in a controlled fashion. Ice grains spontaneously form after a few seconds. Photography with a HeNe line filter of a sheet of HeNe laser light sheet illuminating a cross section of dust grains shows a large scale whorl pattern composed of concentric sub-whorls having wave-like spatially varying intensity. Each sub-whorl is composed of very evenly separated fine-scale stream-lines indicating that the ice grains move in self-organized lanes like automobiles on a multi-line highway. HeNe laser extinction together with an estimate of dust density from the intergrain spacing in photographs indicates a 5 micron nominal dust grain radius. HeNe laser diffraction patterns indicate the ice dust grains are large and ellipsoidal at low pressure (200 mT) but small and spheroidal at high pressure (\textgreater 600 mT). \\[4pt] [1] Shimizu et al [JGR 115, D18205 (2010)]

Authors

  • Paul Bellan

    Caltech, California Institute of Technology

  • Kil-Byoung Chai

    Caltech