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Self-magnetization of CO<sub>2</sub>-produced plasmas by electron Weibel instability

ORAL

Abstract

Weibel-type instability can self-generate and amplify magnetic fields in plasmas with anisotropic velocity distribution. Thermal Weibel instability driven by temperature anisotropy of a stationary plasma, as originally proposed by E. S. Weibel, has proven challenging to measure because of the difficulty in preparing such a distribution. Here we show that by using an ultrashort but intense CO2 laser to ionize hydrogen gas, one can prepare a plasma with tri-Maxwellian velocity distribution that is perfectly suitable for studying thermal electron Weibel instability. The onset, growth and damping of the magnetic fields are captured by a picosecond-long, relativistic electron probe bunch from a linear accelerator. We find that the magnetic fields start growing with a broad two-dimensional wavenumber spectrum, but as the instability grows, the spectrum shrinks to a quasi-single mode in both directions perpendicular to the probe direction. The k-resolved growth rates of the instability deduced agree with kinetic theory. It is also observed that Weibel instability amplifies the magnetic fields and converts up to ~1% of the plasma thermal energy into magnetic energy, which supports the hypothesis of spontaneous magnetization of collisionless astrophysical plasmas by Weibel instability.

Publication: https://arxiv.org/abs/2204.04267

Presenters

  • Chaojie Zhang

    UCLA, University of California, Los Angeles

Authors

  • Chaojie Zhang

    UCLA, University of California, Los Angeles

  • Yipeng Wu

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Mitchell Sinclair

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Audrey Farrell

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Kenneth A Marsh

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Irina Petrushina

    Stony Brook University (SUNY)

  • Navid Vafaei-Najafabadi

    Stony Brook University (SUNY)

  • Apurva Gaikwad

    Stony Brook University

  • Rotem Kupfer

    Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL)

  • Karl Kusche

    Brookhaven National Laboratory, Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL)

  • Mikhail Fedurin

    Brookhaven National Laboratory, Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL)

  • Igor Pogorelsky

    Brookhaven National Laboratory

  • Mikhail Polyanskiy

    Brookhaven National Laboratory, Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL)

  • Chen-Kang Huang

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Jianfei Hua

    Tsinghua University

  • Wei Lu

    Tsinghua University

  • Warren B Mori

    University of California, Los Angeles, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA

  • Chandrashekhar Joshi

    University of California, Los Angeles