We investigate the possibility of generating and studying turbulence in
plasma by means of high-energy density laser-driven experiments. Our focus is
to create supersonic, self-magnetized turbulence with characteristics that
resemble those found in the interstellar medium (ISM).
We consider a target made of a spherical core surrounded by a shell made of
denser material. The shell is irradiated by a sequence of laser pulses sending
inward-propagating shocks that convert the inner core into plasma and create
turbulence. In the context of the evolution of the ISM, the shocks play the
role of supernova remnant shocks and the core represents the ionized
interstellar medium. We consider the effects of both pre-existing and
self-generating magnetic fields and study the evolution of the system by means
of two-dimensional numerical simulations.
We find that the evolution of the turbulent core is generally, subsonic with
rms-Mach number Mt≈0.2. We observe an isotropic, turbulent velocity
field with an inertial range power spectra of P(k)∝k−2.3. We
account for the effects of self-magnetization and find that the resulting
magnetic field has characteristic strength ≈3×104 G. The
corresponding plasma beta is ≈1×104--1×105,
indicating that the magnetic field does not play an important role in the
dynamical evolution of the system.
The natural extension of this work is to study the system evolution in
three-dimensions, with various laser drive configurations, and targets with
shells and cores of different masses. The latter modification may help to
increase the turbulent intensity and possibly create transonic turbulence. One
of the key challenges is to obtain transonic turbulent conditions in a
quasi-steady state environment.Comment: High Energy Density Physics, in pres