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MagLIF is a fairly new fusion concept using a puled-power generator as the main driver. This concept uses a Z-pinch configuration where the implosion is driven by the Z-machine using 27 MA of electrical current in 100 ns. Since the implosion time is long compared to the heat diffusion time of a non-magnetized plasma, MagLIF requires an initial axial magnetic of 30T to reduce heat losses to the liner wall. Since the field needs to penetrate the transmission lines of the pulsed-power generator, as well as the liner itself, the rise time must exceed tens of microseconds. Any coil capable of producing such field on that long a pulse-length is inevitably bulky. The space required to house the coil near the liner increase the inductance of the load, which becomes problematic since the voltage at the load cannot exceed what the driver can already provide. Yet, the enormous amount of current that the Z-machine can provide could be used to produce the required 30 T by tilting the current posts surrounding the liner. However, the field penetration is limited by the skin effect of the liner wall. This paper shows that when current densities are large enough, the material generate resistivity gradients which forces the current to diffusive across the liner wall much fast than the skin time. As a result, the 30T coil can be eliminated and replaced by return current posts with minimal helicity.
The creation of an electron space charge in a dipole magnetic trap and the subsequent injection of positrons has been experimentally demonstrated. Positrons (5eV) were magnetically guided from their source and injected into the trapping field generat
The effect of an external transverse magnetic field on ionization injection of electrons in a laser wakefield accelerator (LWFA) is investigated by theoretical analysis and particle-in-cell simulations. On application of a few tens of Tesla magnetic
Using detailed spectroscopic measurements, highly-resolved in both time and space, a self-generated plasma rotation is demonstrated for the first time in a cylindrical Z-pinch implosion with a pre-embedded axial magnetic field. The plasma parameters
Precise delivery of mass to burning plasmas is a problem of growing interest in magnetic fusion. The answers to how much mass is necessary and sufficient can vary depending on parameters such as the type of atoms involved, the type of applications, p
We present a novel electron injection scheme for plasma wakefield acceleration. The method is based on recently proposed technique of fast electron generation via laser-solid interaction: a femtosecond laser pulse with the energy of tens of mJ hittin