Bulletin of the American Physical Society
65th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 30–November 3 2023; Denver, Colorado
Session UP11: Poster Session VIII:
HED:High Energy Density Plasma Science
MFE: Superconducting Tokamaks; Self-organized configurations II: FRC, RFP, Spheromak; Machine learning techniques in MFE
ICF: Machine learning techniques in ICF
2:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Thursday, November 2, 2023
Room: Plaza ABC
Abstract: UP11.00016 : Developing a magnetized piston driver for collisionless shock experiments*
Presenter:
Lee G Suttle
(Imperial College London)
Authors:
Lee G Suttle
(Imperial College London)
Joshua Chu
(Imperial College London)
Dariusz Duszynski
(Imperial College London)
Jack W Halliday
(University of Oxford)
Katherine Marrow
(Imperial College London)
Stefano Merlini
(Imperial College London)
Thomas Mundy
(Imperial College London)
Danny Russell
(Technical University of Munich)
Sergey V Lebedev
(Imperial College London)
We present the development and first data from a platform to study collisionless shocks using a pulsed power driver. The setup fielded on the MAGPIE generator (1.4 MA, 500 ns current drive) at Imperial College utilizes two side-by-side inverse wire arrays to produce counter-streaming, supersonic flows of plasma ablated from metal wires. Similar setups have previously been used to study plasma interactions including shocks, instabilities and magnetic reconnection in the collisional regime.
To access a collisionless regime (L < λii ~V4), the velocity difference between the flows is maximized by increasing the magnetic field accelerating the flows via the JxB force. Meanwhile, the number and thickness of wires in one array is reduced to transition from steady ablative behavior to an explosive ejection of material into the oncoming flow.
The dynamics of the interaction are captured using multi-frame, self-emission imaging (optical & XUV) and a suite of laser based diagnostics (interferometry, Thomson scattering, Faraday rotation imaging) allows the parameters and structure of the interactions to be measured.
*This work is supported by US DOE Award DE-NA0003764.
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