211 research outputs found
Plasmas and space physics Progress report, 1 Aug. 1965 - 31 Jan. 1966
Theoretical plasma studies for space physics applicatio
Collective bremsstrahlung emission from plasmas containing energetic particle fluxes
Collective bremsstrahlung emission from plasmas containing energetic particle fluxe
Solitary versus Shock Wave Acceleration in Laser-Plasma Interactions
The excitation of nonlinear electrostatic waves, such as shock and solitons,
by ultraintense laser interaction with overdense plasmas and related ion
acceleration are investigated by numerical simulations. Stability of solitons
and formation of shock waves is strongly dependent on the velocity distribution
of ions. Monoenergetic components in ion spectra are produced by "pulsed"
reflection from solitary waves. Possible relevance to recent experiments on
"shock acceleration" is discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Ion shock acceleration by large amplitude slow ion acoustic double layers in laser-produced plasmas
A kinetic model for the shock acceleration of ions in laser-produced plasmas is developed. A fraction of the warm ions are accelerated by the large amplitude monotonic potential of the shock created due the plasma compression and electron heating by the laser. The kinetic model for the monotonic shock is based on the slow ion acoustic double layer (SIADL). It is found that the amplitude of the large amplitude SIADL is almost uniquely defined by the electron temperature. Therefore, a balance between electron heating and plasma compression is needed for optimal ion acceleration by this scheme. Typical Mach numbers of the monotonic shocks are close to 1.5. The scheme could potentially produce monoenergetic ions with a relative energy spread of less than 1%. The model is compared with recent simulations and experiments, where efficient shocks acceleration and production of monoenergetic protons have been observed. Similarities and differences with other shock models are pointed out and discussed
Investigation of a pulsed electrothermal thruster system
The performance of an ablative wall Pulsed Electrothermal (PET) thruster is accurately characterized on a calibrated thrust stand, using polyethylene propellant. The thruster is tested for four configurations of capillary length and pulse length. The exhaust velocity is determined with twin time-of-flight photodiode stagnation probes, and the ablated mass is measured from the loss over ten shots. Based on the measured thrust impulse and the ablated mass, the specific impulse varies from 1000 to 1750 seconds. The thrust to power varies from .05 N/kW (quasi-steady mode) to .10 N/kW (unsteady mode). The thruster efficiency varies from .56 at 1000 seconds to .42 at 1750 seconds. A conceptual design is presented for a 40 kW PET propulsion system. The point design system performance is .62 system efficiency at 1000 seconds specific impulse. The system's reliability is enhanced by incorporating 20, 20 kW thruster modules which are fired in pairs. The thruster design is non-ablative, and uses water propellant, from a central storage tank, injected through the cathode
Laser-driven shock acceleration of monoenergetic ion beams
We show that monoenergetic ion beams can be accelerated by moderate Mach
number collisionless, electrostatic shocks propagating in a long scale-length
exponentially decaying plasma profile. Strong plasma heating and density
steepening produced by an intense laser pulse near the critical density can
launch such shocks that propagate in the extended plasma at high velocities.
The generation of a monoenergetic ion beam is possible due to the small and
constant sheath electric field associated with the slowly decreasing density
profile. The conditions for the acceleration of high-quality, energetic ion
beams are identified through theory and multidimensional particle-in-cell
simulations. The scaling of the ion energy with laser intensity shows that it
is possible to generate MeV proton beams with state-of-the-art 100
TW class laser systems.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
Very High Mach Number Electrostatic Shocks in Collisionless Plasmas
The kinetic theory of collisionless electrostatic shocks resulting from the
collision of plasma slabs with different temperatures and densities is
presented. The theoretical results are confirmed by self-consistent
particle-in-cell simulations, revealing the formation and stable propagation of
electrostatic shocks with very high Mach numbers (), well above the
predictions of the classical theories for electrostatic shocks.Comment: 6 pages, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Investigation of a repetitive pulsed electrothermal thruster
A pulsed electrothermal (PET) thruster with 1000:1 ratio nozzle is tested in a repetitive mode on water propellant. The thruster is driven by a 60J pulse forming network at repetition rates up to 10 Hz (600W). The pulse forming network has a .31 ohm impedance, well matched to the capillary discharge resistance of .40 ohm, and is directly coupled to the thruster electrodes without a switch. The discharge is initiated by high voltage breakdown, typically at 2500V, through the water vapor in the interelectrode gap. Water is injected as a jet through a .37 mm orifice on the thruster axis. Thruster voltage, current and impulse bit are recorded for several seconds at various power supply currents. Thruster to power ratio is typically T/P = .07 N/kW. Tank background pressure precludes direct measurement of exhaust velocity which is inferred from calculated pressure and temperature in the discharge to be about 14 km/sec. Efficiency, based on this velocity and measured T/P is .54 + or - .07. Thruster ablation is zero at the throat and becomes measurable further upstream, indicating that radiative ablation is occurring late in the pulse
Mini-magnetospheres above the lunar surface and the formation of lunar swirls
In this paper we present in-situ satellite data, theory and laboratory
validation that show how small scale collisionless shocks and
mini-magnetospheres can form on the electron inertial scale length. The
resulting retardation and deflection of the solar wind ions could be
responsible for the unusual "lunar swirl" patterns seen on the surface of the
Moon.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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