Collisional effects on Rayleigh-Taylor-induced magnetic fields

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Abstract

Magnetic-field generation from the Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) instability was predicted more than 30 years ago, though experimental measurements of this phenomenon have only occurred in the past few years. These pioneering observations demonstrated that collisional effects are important to B-field evolution. To produce fields of a measurable strength, high-intensity lasers irradiate solid targets to generate the nonaligned temperature and density gradients required for B-field generation. The ablation process naturally generates an unstable system where RT-induced magnetic fields form. Field strengths inferred from monoenergetic-proton radiographs indicate that in the ablation region diffusive effects caused by finite plasma resistivity are not negligible. Results from the first proof-of-existence experiments are reviewed and the role of collisional effects on B-field evolution is discussed in detail.

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Manuel, M. J. E., Flaig, M., Plewa, T., Li, C. K., Séguin, F. H., Frenje, J. A., … Smalyuk, V. (2015). Collisional effects on Rayleigh-Taylor-induced magnetic fields. Physics of Plasmas, 22(5). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4919392

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