Magnetic reconnection during flux conversion in a driven spheromak
Author(s) -
E. B. Hooper,
T. A. Kopriva,
B. I. Cohen,
D. N. Hill,
H. S. McLean,
R. D. Wood,
S. Woodruff,
C. R. Sovinec
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
physics of plasmas
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.75
H-Index - 160
eISSN - 1089-7674
pISSN - 1070-664X
DOI - 10.1063/1.2040207
Subject(s) - spheromak , physics , magnetic reconnection , current sheet , helicity , magnetohydrodynamic drive , magnetic field , magnetohydrodynamics , flux (metallurgy) , kink instability , pinch , field line , magnetic flux , flux tube , atomic physics , plasma , nuclear physics , materials science , particle physics , quantum mechanics , metallurgy
During buildup of a spheromak by helicity injection, magnetic reconnection converts toroidal flux into poloidal flux. This physics is explored in the resistive magnetohydrodynamic code, NIMROD [C.R. Sovinec, A.H. Glasser, T.A. Gianakon, D.C. Barnes, R.A. Nebel, S.E. Kruger, D.D. Schnack, S.J. Plimpton, A. Tarditi, and M.S. Chu, J. Comp. Phys., 195, 355-386 (2004)], which reveals negative current sheets with {lambda} = {mu}{sub 0}j {center_dot} B/B{sup 2}reversed relative to the applied current. The simulated event duration is consistent with magnetic diffusion on the sheet thickness and is accompanied by cathode voltage spikes and poloidal field increases similar to those seen in the Sustained Spheromak Physics Experiment, SSPX [E. B. Hooper, L. D. Pearlstein, and R. H. Bulmer, Nucl. Fusion 39, 863 (1999)]. All magnetic fieldlines are open during reconnection and their trajectories are very sensitive to their starting points, resulting in chaos. The current sheets are most intense inside the separatrix near the X-point of the mean-field spheromak, suggesting that the reconnection occurs near fieldlines which are closed in the azimuthal average.
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