Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
May 2013
Air plasma density decay in a filament produced by an intense femtosecond laser pulse in an external electric field was investigated experimentally and theoretically. It was demonstrated by means of the terahertz scattering technique that the rate of plasma decay decreases with increasing electric field. At the electric field of 7 kV/cm the lifetime of plasma with the density above 10(16) cm(-3) was prolonged from 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci
February 2012
Non-equilibrium plasma demonstrates great potential to control ultra-lean, ultra-fast, low-temperature flames and to become an extremely promising technology for a wide range of applications, including aviation gas turbine engines, piston engines, RAMjets, SCRAMjets and detonation initiation for pulsed detonation engines. The analysis of discharge processes shows that the discharge energy can be deposited into the desired internal degrees of freedom of molecules when varying the reduced electric field, E/n, at which the discharge is maintained. The amount of deposited energy is controlled by other discharge and gas parameters, including electric pulse duration, discharge current, gas number density, gas temperature, etc.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransverse plasma distribution with 10(17) cm(-3) maximum electron density and 150 μm transverse size in a plasma filament formed in air by an intense femtosecond laser pulse was measured by means of optical interferometry. Two orders of magnitude decay of the electron density within 2 ns was obtained by combined use of the interferometry and newly proposed terahertz scattering techniques. Excellent agreement was obtained between the measured plasma density evolution and theoretical calculation.
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