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'Dynamo Interrupted at Its Action': decaying magnetic fields in turbulent laser-plasmas

ORAL

Abstract

Over the last ten years a series of laser-plasma experiments have proven the feasibility of investigating dynamo processes in the laboratory. Key findings of these experiments include the demonstration of bona fide dynamo action in subsonic turbulent plasmas with both low- and order-unity magnetic Prandtl numbers, amplification of magnetic fields in supersonic plasmas, and significantly modified transport of fast particles and heat by dynamo-generated fields. In this talk, I will present new results that address a previously unsolved puzzle from these experiments: how dynamo action ceases. Based on data from Thomson-scattering, X-ray imaging, and proton-radiography diagnostics, we argue that, once the plasma cools below a critical temperature, magnetic-field amplification is not sustained, and the fields that were initially generated by the dynamo subsequently decay. The implications of these results for the critical magnetic Reynolds number of dynamo action in both subsonic and supersonic turbulent laser-plasmas will be discussed.

Publication: Planned paper: "'Dynamo Interrupted at Its Action': decaying magnetic fields in turbulent laser-plasmas"

Presenters

  • Archie F Bott

    University of Oxford

Authors

  • Archie F Bott

    University of Oxford

  • Hannah Poole

    University of Oxford

  • Charlotte A Palmer

    Queen's University Belfast

  • Charlie Heaton

    University of Oxford

  • Patrick Reichherzer

    University of Oxford

  • Nicolas Lopez

    University of Oxford

  • Kasper Moczulski

    University of Rochester

  • Dustin H Froula

    University of Rochester, University of Rochester, Laboratory for Laser Energetics

  • Tim M Johnson

    MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Joseph D Katz

    Laboratory for Laser Energetics, University of Rochester - Laboratory for Laser Energetics, University of Rochester

  • Chikang Li

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Hye-Sook Park

    LLNL

  • Richard D Petrasso

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Brian Reville

    Max-Planck-Institut fur Kernphysik, Max Planck Institute

  • Steven S Ross

    Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab, LLNL, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

  • Dongsu Ryu

    Ulsan Natl Inst of Sci & Tech

  • Fredrick H Seguin

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Thomas G White

    University of Nevada, Reno

  • Adam Reyes

    University of Rochester

  • Yingchao Lu

    University of Rochester

  • Alexander A Schekochihin

    University of Oxford

  • Don Q Lamb

    University of Chicago

  • Petros Tzeferacos

    University of Rochester

  • Gianluca Gregori

    University of Oxford