Laboratory simulations of astrophysical jets and solar coronal loops: new results
Author(s) -
Paul M. Bellan,
Deepak Kumar,
E. V. Stenson,
S. K. P. Tripathi,
G.S. Yun,
Auna Moser,
G. Bertin,
Franca De Luca,
Giuseppe Lodato,
R. Pozzoli,
M. Romé
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
aip conference proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.177
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1551-7616
pISSN - 0094-243X
DOI - 10.1063/1.3460119
Subject(s) - physics , magnetohydrodynamics , plasma , jet (fluid) , toroid , magnetic field , pinch , mechanics , magnetic flux , astrophysics , computational physics , nuclear physics , quantum mechanics
An experimental program underway at Caltech has produced plasmas where the shape is neitherxed by the vacuum chamber norxed by an external coil set, but instead is determined by self-organization. The plasma dynamics is highly reproducible and so can be studied in considerable detail even though the morphology of the plasma is both complex and time-dependent. A surprising result has been the observation that self-collimating MHD-driven plasma jets are ubiquitous and play a fundamental role in the self-organization. The jets can be considered lab-scale simulations of astrophysical jets and in addition are intimately related to solar coronal loops. The jets are driven by the combination of the axial component of the JB force and the axial pressure gradient resulting from the non-uniform pinch force associated with theared axial current density. Behavior is consistent with a model showing that collimation results from axial non-uniformity of the jet velocity. In particular, ow stagnation in the jet frame compresses frozen-in azimuthal magneticux, squeezes together toroidal magnetic eld lines, thereby amplifying the embedded toroidal magneticeld, enhancing the pinch force, and hence causing collimation of the jet.
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