| Literature DB >> 28827638 |
Taichi Morita1, Masafumi Edamoto2, Satoshi Miura2, Atsushi Sunahara3, Naoya Saito2, Yutaro Itadani2, Tomihiko Kojima2, Yoshitaka Mori4, Tomoyuki Johzaki5, Yoshihiro Kajimura6, Shinsuke Fujioka7, Akifumi Yogo7, Hiroaki Nishimura7, Hideki Nakashima8, Naoji Yamamoto8.
Abstract
We report an experimental demonstration of controlling plasma flow direction with a magnetic nozzle consisting of multiple coils. Four coils are controlled separately to form an asymmetric magnetic field to change the direction of laser-produced plasma flow. The ablation plasma deforms the topology of the external magnetic field, forming a magnetic cavity inside and compressing the field outside. The compressed magnetic field pushes the plasma via the Lorentz force on a diamagnetic current: j × B in a certain direction, depending on the magnetic field configuration. Plasma and magnetic field structure formations depending on the initial magnetic field were simultaneously measured with a self-emission gated optical imager and B-dot probe, respectively, and the probe measurement clearly shows the difference of plasma expansion direction between symmetric and asymmetric initial magnetic fields. The combination of two-dimensional radiation hydrodynamic and three-dimensional hybrid simulations shows the control of the deflection angle with different number of coils, forming a plasma structure similar to that observed in the experiment.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28827638 PMCID: PMC5566479 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-09273-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) A multiple-coil system with four rectangular coils and the experimental setup. A B-dot probe was placed below a spherical target and the target was irradiated with a pulsed laser through the coil. The magnetic field structure used in the experiment on the plane x = 0 with (b) four and (c) three coils, and on the plane z = 0 with (d) four and (e) three coils.
Figure 2The time evolution of the magnetic field measured with the B-dot probe using all four coils, the lower three coils (top coil is turned off), and the upper three coils (bottom coil is turned off).
Figure 3Self-emission at t = 0.1 μs [(a) and (d)], 0.2 μs [(b) and (e)], and 0.5 μs [(c) and (f)]. Upper and lower panels show, respectively, the data obtained from four-coil and three-coil operations. White lines show the surface of a supporting frame of the coil. The data (g) and (h) are the emissions at 2 μs and 5 μs, respectively, with four coils.
Figure 4Simulation results from a combined calculation of two-dimensional radiation hydrodynamic and three-dimensional hybrid simulations. Ion density distribution in the unit of cm−3 on the plane x = 0 with (a) all four coils, (b) the three lower coils, and (c) two coils at t = 0.5 μs. Time-evolutions of (d) the deflection angle: and (e) momentum efficiency: .
Figure 5Artificial camera images generated from numerical simulation with four-coil operation at (a) t = 0.2 μs, (b) 0.4 μs, (c) 0.5 μs, (d) 0.6 μs, (e) 0.7 μs, and (f) 0.8 μs outside of the coil. The camera images at (g) t = 0.1 μs and (g) 0.5 μs obtained from the experiment are shown as well.