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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp018k71nk86h
Title: MEASUREMENT AND CHARACTERIZATION OF FAST ELECTRON CREATION, TRAPPING, AND ACCELERATION IN AN RF-COUPLED HIGH-MIRROR-RATIO MAGNETIC MIRROR
Authors: Swanson, Charles
Advisors: Cohen, Samuel A
Contributors: Astrophysical Sciences—Plasma Physics Program Department
Keywords: adiabaticity
fermi acceleration
magnetic mirror
magnetic moment
quasiadiabatic
x-ray spectral inversion
Subjects: Plasma physics
Issue Date: 2018
Publisher: Princeton, NJ : Princeton University
Abstract: The PFRC-II in seed plasma mode is a tandem magnetic mirror. In one end cell is a low-power double-saddle antenna which produces cold (5 eV), tenuous (10^11 /cm^3 ) plasma. Using x-ray pulse-height detectors to probe a previously unmeasured energy range of electrons, I measure a component with temperatures up to 3 keV. I characterize their life cycle, including a Fermi-Ulam-like acceleration process which allows them to attain energies in excess of 30 keV. The fast electrons are born at 300 - 600 eV temperature in one end via secondary electron emission through an RF sheath. These electrons consist of < 1% of the plasma density, yet receive a large portion of the power. The phenomenon pushes models of a similar system, materials processing reactors, into lower-pressure and more-magnetized regimes, with implications on power balance and surface charging. The electrons enter the center cell in the loss cone. There, even though the commonly used adiabatic parameter is small, ρ e ∇B/B << 1, they accumulate and persist for hundreds of transits due to the non-adiabaticity of magnetic moment. The same dynamics also lead to de-trapping in magnetic mirror-based fusion reactors. Under low-pressure conditions, ∼ 10% of these electrons are accelerated still further, up to 3 keV temperature, some electrons above 30 keV, by a form of Fermi-Ulam acceleration. I measure a voltage oscillation consistent with two-stream instability caused by electrons from the last end cell re-entering as a beam. Non-adiabaticity of magnetic moment is essential to destroy resonances between mirror transit time and oscillation period, destroying barriers in phase space. I compare the proposed mechanisms to approximate models. The proposed mechanism for creation is compared to an approximate kinetic model which includes confinement by a plasma-terminating plate with a fluctuating potential. The proposed mechanism for accumulation in the center cell is compared to the nonlinear-resonance overlap model of Chirikov, and ground-truthed with a Boris algorithm simulation. The proposed mechanism for their acceleration is compared to an energy diffusion model. Their mechanism for Fermi-Ulam voltage fluctuation is compared to a nonlinear saturation model. The mechanism for resonance breaking is compared to a 2D numerical map model.
URI: http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp018k71nk86h
Alternate format: The Mudd Manuscript Library retains one bound copy of each dissertation. Search for these copies in the library's main catalog: catalog.princeton.edu
Type of Material: Academic dissertations (Ph.D.)
Language: en
Appears in Collections:Plasma Physics

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