Publication | Closed Access
Simultaneous use of camera and probe diagnostics to unambiguously identify and study the dynamics of multiple underlying instabilities during the route to plasma turbulence
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Citations
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References
2014
Year
EngineeringFluid MechanicsTurbulencePlasma SciencePlasma PhysicsPlasma InstabilitiesUnderlying InstabilitiesCalibrationInstrumentationMultiple-tip Langmuir ProbesMultiple Underlying InstabilitiesSimultaneous UsePlasma DiagnosticsPlasma TurbulencePhysicsApplied Plasma PhysicPlasma InstabilityProbe DiagnosticsNatural SciencesSpectroscopyTurbulence ModelingApplied Physics
We use multiple-tip Langmuir probes and fast imaging to unambiguously identify and study the dynamics of underlying instabilities during the controlled route to fully-developed plasma turbulence in a linear magnetized helicon plasma device. Langmuir probes measure radial profiles of electron temperature, plasma density and potential; from which we compute linear growth rates of instabilities, cross-phase between density and potential fluctuations, Reynold's stress, particle flux, vorticity, time-delay estimated velocity, etc. Fast imaging complements the 1D probe measurements by providing temporally and spatially resolved 2D details of plasma structures associated with the instabilities. We find that three radially separated plasma instabilities exist simultaneously. Density gradient driven resistive drift waves propagating in the electron diamagnetic drift direction separate the plasma into an edge region dominated by strong, velocity shear driven Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities and a central core region which shows coherent Rayleigh-Taylor modes propagating in the ion diamagnetic drift direction. The simultaneous, complementary use of both probes and camera was crucial to identify the instabilities and understand the details of the very rich plasma dynamics.
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