Observations and modeling of magnetized plasma jets and bubbles launched into a transverse B-field

POSTER

Abstract

Hot, dense, plasma structures launched from a coaxial plasma gun on the HelCat dual-source plasma device at the University of New Mexico drag frozen-in magnetic flux into the chamber’s background magnetic field providing a rich set of dynamics to study magnetic turbulence, force-free magnetic spheromaks, shocks, as well as CME-like dynamics possibly relevant to the solar corona. Vector magnetic field data from an eleven-tipped B-dot rake probe and images from an ultra-fast camera will be presented in comparison with ongoing MHD modeling using the 3-D MHD BATS-R-US code developed at the University of Michigan. BATS-R-US employs an adaptive mesh refinement grid (AMR) that enables the capture and resolution of shock structures and current sheets and is uniquely suited for flux-rope expansion modeling. Recent experiments show a possible magnetic Rayleigh-Taylor (MRT) instability that appears asymmetrically at the interface between launched spheromaks (bubbles) and their entraining background magnetic field. Efforts to understand this instability using in situ measurements, new chamber boundary conditions, and ultra-fast camera data will be presented.

Authors

  • D.M. Fisher

    University of New Mexico, Univ of New Mexico

  • Yue Zhang

    University of Washington, Univ. of New Mexico, University of New Mexico

  • Ben Wallace

    University of New Mexico

  • M. Gilmore

    University of New Mexico, Univ of New Mexico

  • Ward B. Manchester IV

    University of Michigan

  • Bart van der Holst

    University of Michigan

  • Barrett N. Rogers

    Dartmouth College

  • Scott Hsu

    LANL, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Lab, Los Alamos Natl Lab