Back to Search Start Over

High-power laser experiment forming a supercritical collisionless shock in a magnetized uniform plasma at rest

Authors :
Yamazaki, Ryo
Matsukiyo, S.
Morita, T.
Tanaka, S. J.
Umeda, T.
Aihara, K.
Edamoto, M.
Egashira, S.
Hatsuyama, R.
Higuchi, T.
Hihara, T.
Horie, Y.
Hoshino, M.
Ishii, A.
Ishizaka, N.
Itadani, Y.
Izumi, T.
Kambayashi, S.
Kakuchi, S.
Katsuki, N.
Kawamura, R.
Kawamura, Y.
Kisaka, S.
Kojima, T.
Konuma, A.
Kumar, R.
Minami, T.
Miyata, I.
Moritaka, T.
Murakami, Y.
Nagashima, K.
Nakagawa, Y.
Nishimoto, T.
Nishioka, Y.
Ohira, Y.
Ohnishi, N.
Ota, M.
Ozaki, N.
Sano, T.
Sakai, K.
Sei, S.
Shiota, J.
Shoji, Y.
Sugiyama, K.
Suzuki, D.
Takagi, M.
Toda, H.
Tomita, S.
Tomiya, S.
Yoneda, H.
Takezaki, T.
Tomita, K.
Kuramitsu, Y.
Sakawa, Y.
Source :
Phys. Rev. E, 105, 025203 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We present a new experimental method to generate quasi-perpendicular supercritical magnetized collisionless shocks. In our experiment, ambient nitrogen (N) plasma is at rest and well-magnetized, and it has uniform mass density. The plasma is pushed by laser-driven ablation aluminum (Al) plasma. Streaked optical pyrometry and spatially resolved laser collective Thomson scattering clarify structures of plasma density and temperatures, which are compared with one-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations. It is indicated that just after the laser irradiation, the Al plasma is magnetized by a self-generated Biermann battery field, and the plasma slaps the incident N plasma. The compressed external field in the N plasma reflects N ions, leading to counter-streaming magnetized N flows. Namely we identify the edge of the reflected N ions. Such interacting plasmas form a magnetized collisionless shock.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, 1 table. Physical Review E, in press

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Phys. Rev. E, 105, 025203 (2022)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2201.07976
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.105.025203