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Faraday Rotation Imaging of X-Pinch Implosion Dynamics on the MAIZE Pulsed Power Facility

ORAL

Abstract

X-pinches, formed by driving intense current through the crossing of 2 or more wires, provide an excellent platform for the study of “micro-pinches” due to their propensity to generate a single micro-pinch at a predetermined location in space (i.e., where the wires cross) [1,2]. Ideally, micro-pinches are areas of run-away compression to very small radii (~1 µm) leading to pressures on the order of ~1 Gbar for currents on the order of ~0.1 MA. However, the fraction of the total current driven through the dense micro-pinch plasma at small radii versus shunted through the surrounding coronal plasma at larger radii is not well known. To allow for the study of micro-pinches and their current distribution on the 1-MA MAIZE facility, a high-magnification Faraday rotation imaging diagnostic (1064 nm) has been developed. Presented is the status of these developments including experimental results characterizing X-pinches on the MAIZE LTD.

[1] S.A. Pikuz et al., Plasma Phys. Rep., 41, 291 (2015);

[2] S.A. Pikuz et al., Plasma Phys. Rep., 41, 445 (2015);

Publication: G. V. Dowhan, A. P. Shah, B. J. Sporer, N. M. Jordan, S. N. Bland, S. V. Lebedev, R. A. Smith, L. Suttle, S. A. Pikuz, and R. D. McBride, High-Magnification Faraday Rotation Imaging and Analysis of X-Pinch Implosion Dynamics, Rev. Sci. Instrum. (submitted June 2022)

Presenters

  • George V Dowhan

    University of Michigan

Authors

  • George V Dowhan

    University of Michigan

  • Akash P Shah

    University of Michigan

  • Brendan J Sporer

    University of Michigan

  • Nicholas M Jordan

    University of Michigan

  • Simon N Bland

    Blackett Lab, Imperial College London

  • Sergey V Lebedev

    Imperial College London

  • Roland A Smith

    Imperial College London

  • Lee G Suttle

    Imperial College London

  • Sergei Pikuz

    Lebedev Physical Institute, P. N. Lebedev Physical Institute

  • Ryan D McBride

    University of Michigan