Difference between revisions of "HEDP notes"
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[https://wiki.iac.isu.edu/index.php/RS#Pulsed-power_applications_.282-LTD-driver_and_more.29 go back] | [https://wiki.iac.isu.edu/index.php/RS#Pulsed-power_applications_.282-LTD-driver_and_more.29 go back] | ||
− | =high energy density plasma | + | =high energy density plasma is a plasma with pressure above 1 MBar= |
<math>1 MBar = 1 \times 10^6 \times 10^5 Pa = 10^{11} Pa = 10^{11} (N m)/(m^2) = 10^{11} J/m = 10^{11} (10^7 erg)/(10^6 cm^3) = 10^{12} erg/cm^3</math> | <math>1 MBar = 1 \times 10^6 \times 10^5 Pa = 10^{11} Pa = 10^{11} (N m)/(m^2) = 10^{11} J/m = 10^{11} (10^7 erg)/(10^6 cm^3) = 10^{12} erg/cm^3</math> | ||
Revision as of 21:06, 25 September 2015
high energy density plasma is a plasma with pressure above 1 MBar
magnetic field produced by single wire (Biot-Savart Law)
- 100 kA at 1 mm radius is 20 T
- 10 MA at 4 mm radius is 500 T
- 100 kA at 1 um radius is 20 kT
magnetic pressure
- 100 kA at 1 mm radius is 1.6 kBar
- 10 MA at 4 mm radius is 1 MBar
- 100 kA at 1 um radius is 1.6 GBar
Bennett condition
- magnetic pressure = plasmakinetic pressure
- 100 kA at 1 um radius is about 1.6 GBar of plasma pressure (wau!! really??!!)