Exploring reconnection, current sheets, and dissipation in a laboratory MHD turbulence experiment David Schaffner Bryn Mawr College Magnetic Reconnection:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Statistical Properties of Broadband Magnetic Turbulence in the Reversed Field Pinch John Sarff D. Craig, L. Frassinetti 1, L. Marrelli 1, P. Martin 1,
Advertisements

Experimental tasks Spectra Extend to small scale; wavenumber dependence (Taylor hyp.); density, flow Verify existence of inertial range Determine if decorrelation.
Ion Heating Presented by Gennady Fiksel, UW-Madison for CMSO review panel May 1-2, 2006, Madison.
Pulsar radio wave dispersion, intermittency, and kinetic Alfvén wave turbulence Paul Terry Stas Boldyrev.
Progress and Plans on Magnetic Reconnection for CMSO For NSF Site-Visit for CMSO May1-2, Experimental progress [M. Yamada] -Findings on two-fluid.
Magnetic Chaos and Transport Paul Terry and Leonid Malyshkin, group leaders with active participation from MST group, Chicago group, MRX, Wisconsin astrophysics.
Anomalous Ion Heating Status and Research Plan
Results from Magnetic Reconnection Experiment And Possible Application to Solar B program For Solar B Science meeting, Kyoto, Japan November 8-11, 2005.
Louisiana Tech University Ruston, LA Slide 1 Time Averaging Steven A. Jones BIEN 501 Monday, April 14, 2008.
The Propagation Distance and Sources of Interstellar Turbulence Steven R. Spangler University of Iowa.
Momentum Transport During Reconnection Events in the MST Reversed Field Pinch Alexey Kuritsyn In collaboration with A.F. Almagri, D.L. Brower, W.X. Ding,
Anti-Parallel Merging and Component Reconnection: Role in Magnetospheric Dynamics M.M Kuznetsova, M. Hesse, L. Rastaetter NASA/GSFC T. I. Gombosi University.
A REVIEW OF WHISTLER TURBULENCE BY THREE- DIMENSIONAL PIC SIMULATIONS A REVIEW OF WHISTLER TURBULENCE BY THREE- DIMENSIONAL PIC SIMULATIONS S. Peter Gary,
Nanoflares and MHD turbulence in Coronal Loop: a Hybrid Shell Model Giuseppina Nigro, F.Malara, V.Carbone, P.Veltri Dipartimento di Fisica Università della.
Further Study of Ion Pickup. Turbulent Alfven waves and magnetic field lines Turbulent waves represent enhanced random fluctuations. Fluctuations vitiate.
In-situ Observations of Collisionless Reconnection in the Magnetosphere Tai Phan (UC Berkeley) 1.Basic signatures of reconnection 2.Topics: a.Bursty (explosive)
DIPARTIMENTO DI FISICA Luca Sorriso-Valvo Sezione di Cosenza Intermittency in solar wind induced electric field Roberto Bruno Vincenzo Carbone.
Lagrangian dispersion of light solid particle in a high Re number turbulence; LES with stochastic process at sub-grid scales CNRS – UNIVERSITE et INSA.
Incorporating Kinetic Effects into Global Models of the Solar Wind Steven R. Cranmer Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
Michael Brown Swarthmore College, NSF Center for Magnetic Self-Organization Tim Gray, Ed Dewey ’10, Bevan Gerber-Siff ’10, Kevin Labe ‘11 Vernon Chaplin.
A Model for Emission from Microquasar Jets: Consequences of a Single Acceleration Episode We present a new model of emission from jets in Microquasars,
Spectra of Gravity Wave Turbulence in a Laboratory Flume S Lukaschuk 1, P Denissenko 1, S Nazarenko 2 1 Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, University of Hull 2.
A. HerrmannITPA - Toronto /19 Filaments in the SOL and their impact to the first wall EURATOM - IPP Association, Garching, Germany A. Herrmann,
The turbulent cascade in the solar wind Luca Sorriso-Valvo LICRYL – IPCF/CNR, Rende, Italy R. Marino, V. Carbone, R. Bruno, P. Veltri,
Structure functions and cancellation exponent in MHD: DNS and Lagrangian averaged modeling Pablo D. Mininni 1,* Jonathan Pietarila Graham 1, Annick Pouquet.
Z. Nemecek, J. Safrankova, L. Prech, O. Goncharov, F. Nemec, A. Pitna, A. University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Prague, Czech Republic G. Zastenker,
Boundaries, shocks, and discontinuities. How discontinuities form Often due to “wave steepening” Example in ordinary fluid: –V s 2 = dP/d  m –P/  
Statistical Fluctuations of Two-dimensional Turbulence Mike Rivera and Yonggun Jun Department of Physics & Astronomy University of Pittsburgh.
12/03/2013, Praga 1 Plasma MHD Activity Observations via Magnetics Diagnostics: Magnetic island Analysis Magnetic island Analysis Frederik Ostyn (UGent)
Cusp turbulence as revealed by POLAR magnetic field data E. Yordanova Uppsala, November, 2005.
Flow and Shear behavior in the Edge and Scrape- off Layer in NSTX L-Mode Plasmas Y. Sechrest and T. Munsat University of Colorado at Boulder S. J. Zweben.
Dynamics of Polarized Quantum Turbulence in Rotating Superfluid 4 He Paul Walmsley and Andrei Golov.
Large-Amplitude Electric Fields Associated with Bursty Bulk Flow Braking in the Earth’s Plasma Sheet R. E. Ergun et al., JGR (2014) Speaker: Zhao Duo.
Why Solar Electron Beams Stop Producing Type III Radio Emission Hamish Reid, Eduard Kontar SUPA School of Physics and Astronomy University of Glasgow,
Voyager 2 Observations of Magnetic Waves due to Interstellar Pickup Ions Colin J. Joyce Charles W. Smith, Phillip A. Isenberg, Nathan A. Schwadron, Neil.
Workshop on Edge Transport in Fusion Plasmas, Kraków 1 Evidence of edge turbulence structures in RFX-mod virtual shell discharges with Gas Puffing Imaging.
Mass loss and Alfvén waves in cool supergiant stars Aline A. Vidotto & Vera Jatenco-Pereira Universidade de São Paulo Instituto de Astronomia, Geofísica.
IMPRS Lindau, Space weather and plasma simulation Jörg Büchner, MPAe Lindau Collaborators: B. Nikutowski and I.Silin, Lindau A. Otto, Fairbanks.
Fractal reconnection at the Earth’s magnetopause and associated ionospheric convection. Gary Abel, Iain Coleman, Mervyn Freeman and Gareth Chisham British.
5. Walen Test analysis The Walen Test results for Cluster 3 are as expected for a reconnection event. The test over the leading edge shows a positive correlation.
Spectral Signature of Emergent Magnetic Flux D1 神尾 精 Solar Seminar Balasubramaniam,K.S., 2001, ApJ, 557, 366. Chae, J. et al., 2000, ApJ, 528,
Turbulence in the magnetosphere studied with CLUSTER data : evidence of intermittency Lamy H. 1, Echim M. 1,2, Darrouzet F. 1, Lemaire J. 3, Décréau P.
COSPAR 2004, Paris D July 21, 2004 THE HELIOSPHERIC DIFFUSION TENSOR John W. Bieber University of Delaware, Bartol Research Institute, Newark.
Kinetic Alfvén turbulence driven by MHD turbulent cascade Yuriy Voitenko & Space Physics team Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy, Brussels, Belgium.
A. Vaivads, M. André, S. Buchert, N. Cornilleau-Wehrlin, A. Eriksson, A. Fazakerley, Y. Khotyaintsev, B. Lavraud, C. Mouikis, T. Phan, B. N. Rogers, J.-E.
Haitao Xu, Nicholas T. Ouellette, and Eberhard Bodenschatz August 28, 2006, Stirring & Mixing, Leiden Experimental Measurements of the Multifractal Dimension.
Intermittency Analysis and Spatial Dependence of Magnetic Field Disturbances in the Fast Solar Wind Sunny W. Y. Tam 1 and Ya-Hui Yang 2 1 Institute of.
-1- Solar wind turbulence from radio occultation data Chashei, I.V. Lebedev Physical Institute, Moscow, Russia Efimov, A.I., Institute of Radio Engineering.
Compressibility and scaling in the solar wind as measured by ACE spacecraft Bogdan A. Hnat Collaborators: Sandra C. Chapman and George Rowlands; University.
The Power Spectra and Point Distribution Functions of Density Fields in Isothermal, HD Turbulent Flows Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute Jongsoo.
A shock is a discontinuity separating two different regimes in a continuous media. –Shocks form when velocities exceed the signal speed in the medium.
Distributions of plasma parameters and observation of intermittency in edge plasma of SUNIST W H Wang, Y X He, and SUNIST Team Department of Engineering.
Stuart D. BaleFIELDS SOC CDR – Science Requirements Solar Probe Plus FIELDS SOC CDR Science and Instrument Overview Science Requirements Stuart D. Bale.
Inherent Length Scales and Apparent Frequencies of Periodic Solar Wind Number Density Structures Nicholeen Viall 1, Larry Kepko 2 and Harlan Spence 1 1.
Plasma MHD Activity Observations via Magnetic Diagnostics Magnetic islands, statistical methods, magnetic diagnostics, tokamak operation.
1) For equivalent ECRH power, off-axis heating results in lower stored energy and lower core temperature 2) Plasma flow is significantly reduced with off-axis.
Measurements of Magnetic Fluctuations in HSX S. Oh, A.F. Almagri, D.T. Anderson, C. Deng, C. Lechte, K.M. Likin, J.N. Talmadge, J. Schmitt HSX Plasma Laboratory,
Turbulence in the Solar Wind
Spectrum and small-scale structures in MHD turbulence Joanne Mason, CMSO/University of Chicago Stanislav Boldyrev, CMSO/University of Madison at Wisconsin.
Profiles of density fluctuations in frequency range of (20-110)kHz Core density fluctuations Parallel flow measured by CHERS Core Density Fluctuations.
How can we measure turbulent microscales in the Interstellar Medium? Steven R. Spangler, University of Iowa.
A Global Hybrid Simulation Study of the Solar Wind Interaction with the Moon David Schriver ESS 265 – June 2, 2005.
Generation of anisotropic turbulence in drifting proton-alpha plasmas Yana Maneva, S. Poedts CmPA, KU Leuven In collaboration with: A. Viñas and L. Ofman.
Faraday Rotation as a Diagnostic of Cosmic Magnetic Fields
Interstellar Turbulence and the Plasma Environment of the Heliosphere
An overview of turbulent transport in tokamaks
Correlations and Scale in Circumstellar Dust Shells
In situ particle detection
New Results for Plasma and Coil Configuration Studies
Correlation Scales of the Turbulent Cascade at 1 AU Charles W
Presentation transcript:

Exploring reconnection, current sheets, and dissipation in a laboratory MHD turbulence experiment David Schaffner Bryn Mawr College Magnetic Reconnection: A Fundamental Process Operating throughout the Universe II AGU – December 18, 2015 San Francisco, CA

Goals for this talk 1)Describe turbulent plasma generation in the laboratory 2)Present evidence for the existence of current sheets in the plasma 3)Present evidence for the connection between these current sheets and turbulent dissipation

MHD Turbulence is generated in the lab 15cm

MHD Turbulence is generated in the lab A plasma gun source produces a dynamic magnetized plasma Plasma travels and evolves in a flux- conserving copper cylinder Plasma system has NO BACKGROUND FIELD Fields and flows are both allowed to evolve dynamically

MHD Turbulence is generated in the lab Design and results here are from the SSX machine at Swarthmore College But efforts underway to further develop this technique at a new facility being constructed at Bryn Mawr College featuring: Longer pulses More diagnostics access Larger scale separation

Spectra shows broadband, decaying turbulence -5/3

Spectra shows broadband, decaying turbulence Early (measured closer to the source) exhibits nearly Kolmogorov scaling for low frequency fluctuations ( kHz) -5/3

Spectra shows broadband, decaying turbulence Later (measured further from the source) exhibits steeper than Kolmogorov scaling for low frequency fluctuations ( kHz) -5/3

Spectra shows broadband, decaying turbulence Both early and late exhibit a steepening of the spectrum between 1 and 2 MHz—suggestive of a dissipation at a specific scale -5/3

Evidence for current sheets: Non-Gaussian PDF of increments observed PDF Fluctuation Level / Stan. Dev Super Gaussian tail in PDF of magnetic fluctuations a signal of intermittency in B-field which often correlates with presence of current sheets Schaffner PPCF 2014

Evidence for current sheets: Increasing intermittency with decreasing scale PDF Fluctuation Level / Stan. DevTime Scale [us] Flatness

Can current sheets be a mechanism for dissipation in this plasma?

Given plasma flow velocity ~20-50km/s Gray region maps to ion inertial scale length if Taylor Hypothesis is applied It is unclear if this approximation can be made (sub-Alfvenic flow) By contrast, the ion Larmor scale maps to a higher frequency in this plasma

Local correlation of temperature and intermittency attempted—but inconclusive Ion heating observed with magnetic jump, but only in time, not space Time (us) Ion T (eV) Mag Increment Local correlation ideal, but needs diagnostic development However… Pursuit of connection between current sheets and dissipation can be made by other means Utilize laboratory advantage for scaling plasma Utilize high statistics to expand PDF analysis into structure function analysis

Evidence for dissipation: Magnetic and temperature intermittency correlate with increasing helicity Temperature intermittency correlates with changing magnetic intermittency Schaffner PRL 2014 Helicity Gun Source Field Flux Results in more twisted fields  more current sheets

Evidence for dissipation: Structure function analysis shows fast transition between inertial and dissipation ranges Schaffner and Brown ApJ 2015 Higher order structure functions show a sharp transition from inertial scales to dissipation scales  this suggest a single dissipation scale (in contrast to that observed in fluid turbulence where there can be a series of dissipation scales sizes) These results are consist with inertial to dissipation range transitions seen in solar wind studies See e.g. Frisch & Vergassola 1991 Kiyani 2009, 2010, 2012

Substantial evidence for the existence of current sheets in a laboratory magnetic turbulent plasma Intermittent PDFs indicate presences of current sheets Laboratory plasma provides opportunity to have control of some parameters Some evidence for connection between current sheets and dissipation—more is needed and being sought

Thank you for your attention Questions and/or Suggestions Welcome!

Extra Slides

Evidence for current sheets: Distribution of rotations peaks at smaller scales Large scales (large time separations) have broader distribution of angle increments  Transition to sharper peak at low angles suggest a transition though a current sheet scale Also, low max angle suggests current “sheets” are fairly coiled up in this plasma Count Angle Increment Decreasing Scale