Bulletin of the American Physical Society
60th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 63, Number 11
Monday–Friday, November 5–9, 2018; Portland, Oregon
Session CP11: Poster Session II: Basic Plasma Physics; Boundary, PMI, Proto-MPEX; International Tokamaks; Turbulence and Transport; Other Configurations; Z-pinch, Dense Plasma Focus and MagLIF (2:00pm-5:00pm)
Monday, November 5, 2018
OCC
Room: Exhibit Hall A1&A
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.DPP.CP11.17
Abstract: CP11.00017 : Pressure Anisotropy Measurements on the Terrestrial Reconnection Experiment*
Presenter:
Rachel A Myers
(Univ of Wisconsin, Madison)
Authors:
Rachel A Myers
(Univ of Wisconsin, Madison)
Jan Egedal
(Univ of Wisconsin, Madison)
Joseph R Olson
(Univ of Wisconsin, Madison)
Samuel Greess
(Univ of Wisconsin, Madison)
Alexander Millet-Ayala
(Univ of Wisconsin, Madison)
Mike Clark
(Univ of Wisconsin, Madison)
John P Wallace
(Univ of Wisconsin, Madison)
Cary B Forest
(Univ of Wisconsin, Madison)
The Terrestrial Reconnection Experiment (TREX) at the Wisconsin Plasma Physics Laboratory (WiPPL) studies collisionless magnetic reconnection. In this regime, electron pressure anisotropy should develop, deviating from Hall reconnection dynamics and driving large-scale current layer formation. This anisotropy has been seen in spacecraft such as Wind, but has not been detected easily in laboratory experiments [1]. In order to measure this anisotropy, a multi-directional Langmuir probe has been designed and constructed, containing four external tips and four shielded tips arranged evenly around the circumference of the probe shaft. Shielding and probe orientation relative to the magnetic field (measured by a 3D magnetic pickup loop) modify the current-voltage characteristic due to differences in the number of electrons entering the probe from each direction. The changes in the I-V curve thus display the extent of observed anisotropy in the collisionless reconnection region. Since the Langmuir tip radius is smaller than the Larmor radius, gyromagnetic effects can be ignored. Results and analysis from the probe are presented.
[1] J. Egedal et al., Nature Phys. (2012).
*This work was funded by the NSF/DOE award DE-SC0013032, and DOE support for the WiPPL user-facility.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.DPP.CP11.17
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