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Evolution of the small ball-like structures in the plasma focus discharge Cover

Evolution of the small ball-like structures in the plasma focus discharge

Open Access
|Jun 2016

Abstract

The experiments were carried out in the PF-1000 plasma-focus device at the maximum current reaching about 2 MA, at the deuterium or neon filling and with deuterium injected from a gas-puff nozzle placed on the axis of the anode face. Ball-like structures of diameters of 1-12 mm were identified in interferometric and XUV pinhole camera frames. We made the statistical description of their parameters. A lifetime of the ball-like structures was in the range from 30 to 210 ns, and in some cases even more. These structures appeared mostly at the surface of the imploding plasma shell and they did not change their position in relation to the anode end. During the evolution of these structures, interferometric fringes were observed near the surfaces of the structures only, and their internal parts were initially chaotic (without noticeable) fringes. Subsequently the number of interferometric fringes increased (the internal ‘chaotic’ area was filled with fringes too) and later on it decreased. The radii of the ball-like structures were mostly increasing during their existence. The maximum electron density reached the value of 1024 to 1025 m-3. The ball-like structures decayed by absorption inside the expanded pinch column and/or gradually expired in rare plasma outside of the dense plasma column.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/nuka-2016-0027 | Journal eISSN: 1508-5791 | Journal ISSN: 0029-5922
Language: English
Page range: 155 - 159
Submitted on: Sep 24, 2015
Accepted on: Dec 3, 2015
Published on: Jun 15, 2016
Published by: Institute of Nuclear Chemistry and Technology
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2016 Balzhima Cikhardtova, Pavel Kubes, Jakub Cikhardt, Marian Paduch, Ewa Zielinska, Josef Kravarik, Karel Rezac, Jiri Kortanek, published by Institute of Nuclear Chemistry and Technology
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.