APS Logo

Magnetically-driven plasma jet experiments on the Big Red Ball

POSTER

Abstract

Plasma jet experiments using planar coaxial electrodes with bias magnetic field, emulating the central object–accretion disk system, are conducted on the BRB at WiPPL. Hydrogen plasma jets (density ∼ 10−19 m−3 at 11 +- 2eV) at high bias voltage (2–3 kV) are injected into different H plasma backgrounds (density ∼ 10−17 m−3 at ∼ 5 eV). Axial component Bz propagates downstream from the gun, undergoing collimation while elongating. The induced toroidal field Bϕ shows pinching near the column axis, indicative of plasma compression or helicity injection. The current density Jz is strongly collimated, extending up to ∼ 90–100 cm from the gun, approximately propagating along collimated Bz lines. Later, both Bz and Jz distributions broaden and weaken, suggesting relaxation or enhanced interaction with the background plasma. This J − B topology is consistent with earlier plasma jet experiments. Bz with average peak amplitude ∼ 240 G remain collimated for longer durations when jets are launched into lower density plasma: lasting ∼ 34 μs at 1. x 10−17 m−3 compared to ∼ 24 μs at 6.2 x 10−17 m−3 (each at 3 kV bias). The propagation speed of Bz [90, 76, 46] km/s decreases with increasing background density ∼ [2.1, 3.1, 5.2] x 10−17 m−3, for jets biased at 2 kV. Magnetic field analysis suggests that the plasma jets likely operate in a regime with a low force-free eigen-value αgun, placing them below the Kruskal–Shafranov threshold for the current-driven ideal kink instability.

Presenters

  • Shreya Dwivedi

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

Authors

  • Shreya Dwivedi

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Joseph R Olson

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Jeremiah Kirch

    University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • Paul Gradney

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Hui Li

    Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL)

  • Cary B Forest

    University of Wisconsin - Madison, Realta Fusion; University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • Ellen Gould Zweibel

    OCC, University of Wisconsin - Madison