AI Article Synopsis

  • A new technique has been developed to measure velocity and ion sound speed in magnetized, high-energy-density plasmas using a "b-dot" probe in a supersonic plasma flow.
  • The method relies on the magnetic Reynolds number to relate the magnetic field to current, allowing for real-time velocity estimation and shock structure analysis via a Mach-Zehnder interferometer.
  • Measurements of a specific aluminum plasma generated by an exploding wire array show strong agreement with existing optical and simulation data, confirming the technique's effectiveness.

Article Abstract

We present a technique to measure the time-resolved velocity and ion sound speed in magnetized, supersonic high-energy-density plasmas. We place an inductive ("b-dot") probe in a supersonic pulsed-power-driven plasma flow and measure the magnetic field advected by the plasma. As the magnetic Reynolds number is large (R > 10), the plasma flow advects a magnetic field proportional to the current at the load. This enables us to estimate the flow velocity as a function of time from the delay between the current at the load and the signal at the probe. The supersonic flow also generates a hydrodynamic bow shock around the probe, the structure of which depends on the upstream sonic Mach number. By imaging the shock around the probe with a Mach-Zehnder interferometer, we determine the upstream Mach number from the shock Mach angle, which we then use to determine the ion sound speed from the known upstream velocity. We use the sound speed to infer the value of Z̄T, where Z̄ is the average ionization and T is the electron temperature. We use this diagnostic to measure the time-resolved velocity and sound speed of a supersonic (M ∼ 8), super-Alfvénic (M ∼ 2) aluminum plasma generated during the ablation stage of an exploding wire array on the Magpie generator (1.4 MA, 250 ns). The velocity and Z̄T measurements agree well with the optical Thompson scattering measurements reported in the literature and with 3D resistive magnetohydrodynamic simulations in GORGON.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0098823DOI Listing

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