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Molecular dynamics simulation studies and experimental measurements of radiofrequency heating for strongly coupled and extremely magnetized ultracold neutral plasmas

Abstract

Ultracold neutral plasmas(UNPs) are good experimental platforms for fundamental plasma physics studies because of their experimentally adjustable parameters, accessible timescales, ability to enter the strong coupling parameter regime, and easy access to large degrees of electron magnetization. The work in this thesis contains both simulation and experimental studies of UNPs. One simulation project describes a new UNP heating mechanism discovered using Molecular Dynamics simulations: DC electric field heating. This DC electric field heating mechanism occurs when a DC electric field is present when the plasma is formed. sets a lower limit of how cold UNP electron temperatures can be reached experimentally. A second simulation project investigates a many-body physics effect on collisional damping in UNPs and a breakdown in standard plasma theory treatments when the plasma is approaching the strongly coupled regime. This breakdown arises due to the increasing significance of three- or many-body electron-ion interactions influencing the plasma transport properties and particle collisions. My simulations find evidence for this being the case. Experimental studies of UNP electron-ion collision physics during the application of high-frequency RF electric fields to the UNP were conducted, and measurements of the RF-induced electron heating rate from the weak magnetized regime to extremely magnetized regime were performed. The results obtained are in qualitative agreement with the theory prediction but there's quantitative disagreement. Possibilities for resolving this disagreement are presented.

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Rights Access

Embargo expires: 12/29/2024.

Subject

RF heating
plasma
strong magnetized

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