The Madison plasma dynamo experiment (MPDX) is a novel, versatile, basic
plasma research device designed to investigate flow driven magnetohydrodynamic
(MHD) instabilities and other high-β phenomena with astrophysically
relevant parameters. A 3 m diameter vacuum vessel is lined with 36 rings of
alternately oriented 4000 G samarium cobalt magnets which create an
axisymmetric multicusp that contains ∼14 m3 of nearly magnetic field
free plasma that is well confined and highly ionized (>50%). At present, 8
lanthanum hexaboride (LaB6) cathodes and 10 molybdenum anodes are inserted
into the vessel and biased up to 500 V, drawing 40 A each cathode, ionizing a
low pressure Ar or He fill gas and heating it. Up to 100 kW of electron
cyclotron heating (ECH) power is planned for additional electron heating. The
LaB6 cathodes are positioned in the magnetized edge to drive toroidal
rotation through J×B torques that propagate into the
unmagnetized core plasma. Dynamo studies on MPDX require a high magnetic
Reynolds number Rm>1000, and an adjustable fluid Reynolds number 10<Re<1000, in the regime where the kinetic energy of the flow exceeds the magnetic
energy (MA2=(v/vA)2>1). Initial results from MPDX are presented
along with a 0-dimensional power and particle balance model to predict the
viscosity and resistivity to achieve dynamo action.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figure