4.4 Article

Shocks propagate in a 2D dusty plasma with less attenuation than due to gas friction alone

Journal

PHYSICS OF PLASMAS
Volume 27, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0016504

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-SG0014566]
  2. Army Research Office under MURI Grant [W911NF-18-1-0240]
  3. NASA-JPL [1573629]

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In a dusty plasma, an impulsively generated shock, i.e., blast wave, was observed to decay less than would be expected due to gas friction alone. In the experiment, a single layer of microparticles was levitated in a radio frequency glow-discharge plasma. In this layer, the microparticles were self-organized as a 2D solid-like strongly coupled plasma, which was perturbed by the piston-like mechanical movement of a wire. To excite a blast wave, the wire's motion was abruptly stopped, so that the input of mechanical energy ceased at a known time. It was seen that, as it propagated across the layer, the blast wave's amplitude persisted with little decay. This result extends similar findings, in previous experiments with 3D microparticle clouds, to the case of 2D clouds. In our cloud, out-of-plane displacements were observed, lending support to the possibility that an instability, driven by wakes in the ion flow, provides energy that sustains the blast wave's amplitude despite the presence of gas damping.

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