Spectroscopic measurements of the magnetic field evolution in a Z-pinch throughout stagnation and with particularly high spatial resolution reveal a sudden current redistribution from the stagnating plasma (SP) to a low-density plasma (LDP) at larger radii, while the SP continues to implode. Based on the plasma parameters it is shown that the current is transferred to an increasing-conductance LDP outside the stagnation, a process likely to be induced by the large impedance of the SP. Since an LDP often exists around imploding plasmas and in various pulsed-power systems, such a fast current redistribution may dramatically affect the behavior and achievable parameters in these systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing detailed spectroscopic measurements, highly resolved in both time and space, a self-generated plasma rotation is demonstrated using a cylindrical implosion with a preembedded axial magnetic field (B_{z0}). The rotation direction is found to depend on the direction of B_{z0} and its velocity is found comparable to the peak implosion velocity, considerably affecting the force and energy balance throughout the implosion. Moreover, the evolution of the rotation is consistent with magnetic flux surface isorotation, a novel observation in a Z pinch, which is a prototypical time dependent system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a novel, counter-intuitive method, based on dark-state protection, for significantly improving exciton transport efficiency through "wires" comprising a chain of molecular sites with an intrinsic energy gradient. Specifically, by introducing "barriers" to the energy landscape at regular intervals along the transport path, we find that undesirable radiative recombination processes are suppressed due to a clear separation of sub-radiant and super-radiant eigenstates in the system. This, in turn, can lead to an improvement in transmitted power by many orders of magnitude, even for very long chains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe fundamental physics of the magnetic field distribution in a plasma implosion with a preembedded magnetic field is investigated within a gas-puff Z pinch. Time and space resolved spectroscopy of the polarized Zeeman effect, applied for the first time, reveals the impact of a preembedded axial field on the evolution of the current distribution driven by a pulsed-power generator. The measurements show that the azimuthal magnetic field in the imploding plasma, even in the presence of a weak axial magnetic field, is substantially smaller than expected from the ratio of the driving current to the plasma radius.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ion kinetic energy in a stagnating plasma was previously determined by Kroupp et al. [Phys. Rev.
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