 |
A
Projection of magnetic field lines onto the plane centered z=94.8 cm
from the targets. The data were derived from vector magnetic field
measurements taken on five planes at distances ranging from 31.5 to 284.4 cm
from the targets. The time is 5.25 microseconds after the targets are struck. Magnetic
field data in each plane were acquired at 900 spatial locations on a rectangular grid with 1 cm spacing in the x and y directions.
The background magnetic field which goes out of the plane of the figure is not included.
The field lines are colored according to the local magnetic field in G.
Two reconnection regions are visible above and below the central current channel.
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See papers related to this image:
Three-dimensional current systems generated by plasmas colliding in a background magnetoplasma. |
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A field line bundle composed of those field lines that pass near the upper reconnection region shown in Figure 8.
The color bar is the same as that in Figure 8.
The background magnetic field is in the z direction but is not included in this bundle.
(a) is a global view looking away from the cathode plasma source.
To help grasp the three-dimensional nature of the image, a semitransparent plane with white grid lines on a black surface is placed at z=95cm.
Because of the transparency, field lines appear grayed if they are beneath the grid lines and are darker beneath the open areas.
Field lines above the plane are unaffected.
The gray grid lines are spaced at 5 cm intervals and are centered at z = 95 cm.
Data were acquired at 1 cm intervals everywhere in the transverse plane.
Note in (b) that the field lines span both sides of the grid, and near the reconnection point have a substantial out-of-plane component.
|
See papers related to this image:
Three-dimensional current systems generated by plasmas colliding in a background magnetoplasma. |
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A
three-dimensional view of the instantaneous magnitude of the
magnetic field of an Alfvén wave, measured in the LArge
Plasma Device. The wave propagates primarily in the direction
of the ambient magnetic field, but there is also cross-field
propagation of wave energy until the wave reaches the radial
boundary of the plasma. Alfvén waves with small cross-field
structure, such as the one visualized in this image have electric
fields parallel to the background field and therefore can
accelerate electrons. This mechanism is thought to play a
key role in the formation of the earth’s aurora [See
Wygant, et al., JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 105,
NO. A8, doi:10.1029/1999JA900500, 2000] |
See
papers related to this image:
http://plasma.physics.ucla.edu/bapsf/papers/IEEE_cyclotron_waves.pdf
http://plasma.physics.ucla.edu/bapsf/papers/Vincena_PRL_2004.pdf
Contact: vincena@physics.ucla.edu
for more information. |
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Whistler
waves are launched from a small loop antenna which then propagate
into a carefully created density striation (field-aligned,
cylindrical depletion in plasma density.) The waves undergo
a linear conversion to lower hybrid waves with a much shorter
perpendicular wavenumber but with a large electric field which
can then heat the plasma ions. Using carefully scaled dimensionless
parameters, this experiment recreates the essential physics
of a process which occurs in the earth’s ionosphere. |
See
papers related to this image:
http://plasma.physics.ucla.edu/bapsf/papers/Bamber_jgr.pdf
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The
instantaneous vector wave magnetic field produced by two interacting
Alfvén waves. The wave propagates from left to right
and the relative phase of the two waves is such that they
constructively interfere at the center of the plasma column,
producing a perturbation of delta-B/B = 10^-3. |
See
papers related to this
image:
http://plasma.physics.ucla.edu/bapsf/papers/Budapest_paper.pdf |
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This
is a snapshot of the time-varying magnetic field measured
in a plane perpendicular to the background magnetic field
within the plasma of LAPD. In this experiment, high-power
microwaves are directed from outside of the chamber, through
a window, and into the plasma. The microwaves are incident
from y=0 and x=-50cm. They heat the plasma in a narrow region
at the edge (x=-20cm) producing a field-aligned burst of electrons
(a current channel) which shows up as a circulation of the
magnetic field vectors. |
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Image
of a helium discharge tube being used to calibrate a laser-induced
fluorescence diagnostic. The output of a narrow band (500MHz)
dye laser is directed into pink glow of hot helium neutrals.
Only when the frequency of the laser is tuned to match a specific
atomic transition does the yellow line in the middle of the
image (and a reflection from the glass tube) become visible. |
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Current
streamlines of a shear Alfvén wave launched by a helical
antenna. The wave magnetic field on a plane orthogonal to
the background magnetic field is shown to guide the eye. For
this wave, the parallel current is carried by the electrons
and the perpendicular current is carried by the ions. |
See
papers related to this image:
http://plasma.physics.ucla.edu/bapsf/papers/Budapest_paper.pdf |
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Streamlines
of current from an azimuthally symmetric Alfvén wave,
launched by modulating a current filament with transverse
size on the order of the electron collisionless skin depth
(and the ion-sound gyroradius: cs/wci). This wave is at a
frequency close to the ion-cyclotron frequency, so that the
ExB drifts of the ions and electrons no longer cancel exactly
and the wave develops both an oscillating azimuthal electric
field and axial magnetic field. |
This
image appears in an article accepted for publication in the
IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science, Special Issue: Images
in Plasma Science, 2005, authors: Vincena and Gekelman.
See also, http://plasma.physics.ucla.edu/bapsf/papers/beach_pop.pdf
Contact: vincena@physics.ucla.edu
for more information. |
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The
currents of Alfven waves with several "m" numbers
rendered as snakes. |
| This
image appears in an article accepted for publication in the
IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science, Special Issue: Images
in Plasma Science, 2005, authors: Gekelman and Vincena |
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Time-averaged
wave energy density around a cylindrical density cavity for
a single frequency (f = 6 times the lower hybrid frequency).
The top panel shows the energy density and with contours.
The middle panel shows the density gradient in fill; and the
energy density contours from the top panel to allow an easy
comparison. The bottom panel shows a line-cut across y = 0.0
cm. The striation diameter is 2.5 cm. |
See
papers related to this image:
http://plasma.physics.ucla.edu/bapsf/papers/JGR_Lower_Hybrid.pdf |
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Upper
plate: Streamlines (in the perpendicular plane) of the wave
magnetic field of two interacting shear Alfvén waves,
along with isosurfaces of the axial current density.
Lower plate: Close up of the instantaneous wave magnetic field
vectors for the indicated plane.
The plasma source (a heated, oxide-coated cathode) is visible
in the upper, right-hand corner of the image. |
See
papers related to this image:
http://plasma.physics.ucla.edu/bapsf/papers/Budapest_paper.pdf |
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This
is an additional image from an experiment on the interaction
of two Alfvén waves. Data were acquired on a plane
2.64 meters from a helical antenna. The magnetic vector field
is color coded in accord with the field strength. Data were
acquired at each location that an arrow is drawn. The background
magnetic field is directed into the page. |
See
papers related to this image:
http://plasma.physics.ucla.edu/bapsf/papers/Budapest_paper.pdf |
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Creation
of drift waves by the controlled depletion of plasma electrons
in a flux tube intersecting a circular, current collecting
copper mesh. Upper panel: measurement of the density cavity
via ion saturation current collected by a probe in a perpendicular
plane located 1.6 meters axially away from the current collecting
"antenna", along with a computer-generated representation
for reference. Lower panel: two instantaneous measurements
of the density perturbation of the m=-1 drift wave which exist
along the steepest density gradient of the depletion, along
with the "antenna" for reference. |
See
papers related to this image:
http://plasma.physics.ucla.edu/bapsf/papers/Budapest_paper.pdf
Contact: vincena@physics.ucla.edu
for more information. |
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This
image is a representation of the product of radius and wave
current density (r*j) for an Alfvén wave, at one instant
in time. The vector current density is calculated for the
case with electron plasma beta = 6.8*(m_electron/m_ion). The
source is located at z _ 0, r _ 0, and has a 0.5 cm radius.
The centers of the vortices are located 1.25 m or lambda/2
apart. |
See
papers related to this image:
http://plasma.physics.ucla.edu/bapsf/papers/lenemanprl.pdf |
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This
perspective image was created from measurements of the magnetic
field in the case of constructive interference of two Alfvén
cones. The magnitude is shown as a semi-transparent surface
with an embedded vector field. For referenc e, the vectors
are also displayed in an orthogonal projection. |
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Two
intertwined magnetic flux tubes. |
See
papers related to this image:
W. Gekelman, J.M. Urrutia, R.L. Stenzel, Measurement of
Magnetic Helicity During the Disruption of a Neutral Current
Sheet, from Magnetotail Physics, edited A.T. Lui,
Johns Hopkins University Press, pp 261-274, (1987) |
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The
three dimensional merging of electrical currents in a plasma. |
See
papers related to this image:
W. Gekelman, J. Maggs, H. Pfister, Experiments on the Interaction
of Current Channels in a Laboratory Plasma: Relaxation to
a Force Free State, IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci., 20,614-621
(1992). |
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The
computed distribution function of electrons during an interaction
with a wave. |
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The
violent disruption of a sheet of current. |
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Tearing
of a thin current sheet. |
See
papers related to this image:
W. Gekelman, H. Pfister, Experimental Observations of the
Tearing of an Electron Current Sheet, Phys. Fluids, 31,
2017-2025 (1988). |
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The
transmission response function of a directional velocity analyzer. |
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This
is a display of the magneic field (arrows) and two isosurfaces
(blue and green) of a shear Alfven wave. The data is rendered
inside a scale model of the machine (the LAPD {Large Plasma
Device}) that the data was acquired in. A shear Alfven wave
launched from an oscillating current on the scale of the
electron skin depth. The wave magnetic field is shown as
arrows. The magnitude of the wave is shwon in cigar shaped
isosurfaces. They are hollow since the wave intensity is
zero on axis. The antenna which launches the waves is shown
on the extreme right. Also shown is the cathode and a cutaway
of the magnets which surround the vacuum vessel. |
See
papers related to this image:
W. Gekelman, S. Vincena, D. Leneman, J. Maggs, "Laboratory
Experiments on Shear Alfven waves and their relationship to
space plasma", JGR, 102, 7225-7236 (1997) |
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The
oxide coated cathode shown at emission temperature. The cathode
was designed to emit over 20 kA in magnetic fields of up to
4 kGauss. |
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Shear
Alfven wave in Argon shown on six planes. In this experiment
the wave magnetic field was measured at 30,000 spatial locations
(and several thousand time steps) on 16 planes. There are
2,000 measurement locations at each plane. Red shows the highest
wave intensity. |
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A
Helium Plasma viewed through an end port. |
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This
is a photograph of the elements of a tunable dye-laser used
for a laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) diagnostic. On the
optical table, the output of the pump laser (Coherent Innova
400 Argon Ion Laser) is steered with optics into the smaller
ring dye laser cavity (Coherent 899-29) which produces a narrow
band (500MHz) output which is then delivered to the plasma
device using a fiber optic cable (not shown). |