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Temperature Relaxation Rates for Strongly Magnetized Plasmas in Antimatter Traps

POSTER

Abstract

Antimatter appears in nature in tiny quantities relative to matter for reasons not yet fully understood. To address this open question, a better understanding of the fundamental physics governing antimatter is needed. The ALPHA experiment at CERN is working to improve our understanding of antimatter by trapping antihydrogen. The plasmas used to form the antihydrogen fall into the very strongly magnetized regime, meaning that the gyrofrequency exceeds the plasma frequency and in the moderate Coulomb coupling regime denoting that the potential energy of interaction is on the order of the kinetic energy. These regimes modify the Coulomb collision frequency making traditional theories invalid. Our goal is to develop the theoretical plasma physics models in these regimes.

Using a recently developed generalized Boltzmann kinetic theory for strongly magnetized plasmas, the electron-ion temperature relaxation rates in both parallel and perpendicular directions are calculated. In this regime, the particles will emit radiation producing an anisotropy between the parallel and perpendicular temperatures which is transferred to the other species via Coulomb collisions. The work presented here will contribute to a more complete fluid model, which we aim to develop for this novel plasma regime.

Presenters

  • James C Welch

    University of Michigan

Authors

  • James C Welch

    University of Michigan

  • Louis Jose

    University of Michigan

  • Tim D Tharp

    Marquette University

  • Scott D Baalrud

    University of Michigan