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Measuring the Alfvén wave Parametric Decay Instability Growth Rate in the Laboratory

ORAL

Abstract

Alfvén waves, a fundamental mode of magnetized plasmas, are ubiquitous in lab and space. The non-linear behavior of these modes is thought to play a key role in important problems in space plasma such as the heating of the solar corona and solar wind turbulence. In particular, theoretical predictions show that these Alfvén waves may be unstable to various parametric instabilities, but space observations of these processes are limited. We present an experiment on the Large Plasma Device at UCLA aimed at measuring the Parametric Decay Instability (PDI) growth rate in the laboratory. In these experiments, a high amplitude δB/B0~0.7% pump Alfvén wave is launched from one end of the device and a smaller seed Alfvén wave is launched from the other side. When the frequency of the seed wave is chosen to match the backward wave expected from PDI, damping of the seed wave is reduced. This reduction in damping is well-matched to the theoretically expected PDI growth rate and scales with the pump wave amplitude. Work is underway to expand this result across the accessible LAPD parameter space and compare with related numerical simulations. Results may help validate PDI theories and establish signatures for future space observations.

Presenters

  • Seth Dorfman

    Space Science Institute

Authors

  • Seth Dorfman

    Space Science Institute

  • Feiyu Li

    New Mexico Consortium

  • Xiangrong Fu

    New Mexico Consortium

  • Stephen T Vincena

    UCLA, University of California, Los Angeles

  • Troy A Carter

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Patrick Pribyl

    University of California, Los Angeles, UCLA, University of California Los Angeles, University of California Los Angles