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The hot hELicon eXperiment (HELIX) and the large experiment on instabilities and anisotropy (LEIA)

Authors :
E. E. Scime
Amy Keesee
R. A. Hardin
Matthew M. Balkey
John Kline
Saeid Houshmandyar
Dustin McCarren
Stephanie Sears
X. Sun
I. A. Biloiu
P. A. Keiter
J. Carr
S. Chakraborty Thakur
M. Galante
Source :
Journal of Plasma Physics. 81
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2014.

Abstract

The West Virginia University Hot hELIcon eXperiment (HELIX) provides variable density and ion temperature plasmas, with controllable levels of thermal anisotropy, for space relevant laboratory experiments in the Large Experiment on Instabilities and Anisotropy (LEIA) as well as fundamental studies of helicon source physics in HELIX. Through auxiliary ion heating, the ion temperature anisotropy (T⊥/T∥) is variable from 1 to 20 for parallel plasma beta (β = 8πnkTi∥/B2) values that span the range of 0.0001 to 0.01 in LEIA. The ion velocity distribution function is measured throughout the discharge volume in steady-state and pulsed plasmas with laser induced fluorescence (LIF). The wavelengths of very short wavelength electrostatic fluctuations are measured with a coherent microwave scattering system. Operating at low neutral pressures triggers spontaneous formation of a current-free electric double layer. Ion acceleration through the double layer is detected through LIF. LIF-based velocity space tomography of the accelerated beam provides a two-dimensional mapping of the bulk and beam ion distribution functions. The driving frequency for the m = 1 helical antenna is continuously variable from 8.5 to 16 MHz and frequency dependent variations of the RF coupling to the plasma allow the spontaneously appearing double layers to be turned on and off without modifying the plasma collisionality or magnetic field geometry. Single and multi-species plasmas are created with argon, helium, nitrogen, krypton, and xenon. The noble gas plasmas have steep neutral density gradients, with ionization levels reaching 100% in the core of the plasma source. The large plasma density in the source enables the study of Aflvén waves in the HELIX device.

Details

ISSN :
14697807 and 00223778
Volume :
81
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Plasma Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........04b0c04b5e3d446ff41390acf1387ae1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022377814000890