Publication | Closed Access
Properties of a high-beta plasma produced by electron-cyclotron heating
87
Citations
4
References
1964
Year
EngineeringPlasma SciencePlasma PhysicsMagnetic Confinement FusionHigh-beta PlasmaPlasma TheoryDense PlasmaPlasma ConfinementThermodynamicsInstrumentationNonthermal PlasmaElectron-cyclotron PlasmaElectrical EngineeringPhysicsMagnetic-mirror MachinesApplied Plasma PhysicEpa FacilityLaboratory Plasma PhysicsApplied PhysicsPlasma ApplicationParticle Accelerator
The sequence of experiments resulting in the development of steady-state dense hot-electron plasmas is briefly described. These plasmas are produced in magnetic-mirror machines by radiation at the electron-cyclotron frequency. The electron-cyclotron plasma with the greatest stored energy to date has a volume of ∼ 50 liters, an electron "temperature" of 120 keV, a density of 4 — 7 × 1011/cm3, an d an average beta of ∼ 0.4. This plasma is created in the EPA Facility by a 50-kW c.w. 10.6-gHz microwave power source. The construction and operation of the machine are briefly discussed. The analysis and interpretation of the bremsstrahlung and diamagnetic measurements employed to determine these parameters are given. Diamagnetic and particle decay measurements on a smaller machine, the Physics Test Facility, are also described.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1