The formation of reverse shocks in magnetized high energy density supersonic plasma flows

A new experimental platform was developed, based on the use of supersonic plasma flow from the ablation stage of an inverse wire array z-pinch, for studies of shocks in magnetized high energy density physics plasmas in a well-defined and diagnosable 1-D interaction geometry. The mechanism of flow ge...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physics of plasmas 2014-05, Vol.21 (5)
Hauptverfasser: Lebedev, S. V., Suttle, L., Swadling, G. F., Bennett, M., Bland, S. N., Burdiak, G. C., Burgess, D., Chittenden, J. P., Ciardi, A., Clemens, A., de Grouchy, P., Hall, G. N., Hare, J. D., Kalmoni, N., Niasse, N., Patankar, S., Sheng, L., Smith, R. A., Suzuki-Vidal, F., Yuan, J., Frank, A., Blackman, E. G., Drake, R. P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A new experimental platform was developed, based on the use of supersonic plasma flow from the ablation stage of an inverse wire array z-pinch, for studies of shocks in magnetized high energy density physics plasmas in a well-defined and diagnosable 1-D interaction geometry. The mechanism of flow generation ensures that the plasma flow (ReM ∼ 50, MS ∼ 5, MA ∼ 8, Vflow ≈ 100 km/s) has a frozen-in magnetic field at a level sufficient to affect shocks formed by its interaction with obstacles. It is found that in addition to the expected accumulation of stagnated plasma in a thin layer at the surface of a planar obstacle, the presence of the magnetic field leads to the formation of an additional detached density jump in the upstream plasma, at a distance of ∼c/ωpi from the obstacle. Analysis of the data obtained with Thomson scattering, interferometry, and local magnetic probes suggests that the sub-shock develops due to the pile-up of the magnetic flux advected by the plasma flow.
ISSN:1070-664X
1089-7674
DOI:10.1063/1.4874334