Abstract
In this paper, we propose an efficient diagnostic technique for determining spatially resolved measurements of the ion density ratio in a magnetized two-ion species plasma. Shear Alfvén waves were injected into a mixed helium–neon plasma using a magnetic loop antenna, for frequencies spanning the ion cyclotron regime. Two distinct propagation bands are observed, bounded by
$\omega < \varOmega _\textrm {Ne}$
and
$\omega _{ii} < \omega < \varOmega _\textrm {He}$
, where
$\omega _{ii}$
is the ion–ion hybrid cutoff frequency and
$\varOmega _\textrm {He}$
and
$\varOmega _\textrm {Ne}$
are the helium and neon cyclotron frequencies, respectively. A theoretical analysis of the cutoff frequency was performed and shows it to be largely unaffected by kinetic electron effects and collisionality, although it can deviate significantly from
$\omega _{{ii}}$
in the presence of warm ions due to ion finite Larmor radius effects. A new diagnostic technique and accompanying algorithm was developed in which the measured parallel wavenumber
$k_\parallel$
is numerically fit to the predicted inertial Alfvén wave dispersion in order to resolve the local ion density ratio. A major advantage of this algorithm is that it only requires a measurement of
$k_\parallel$
and the background magnetic field in order to be employed. This diagnostic was tested on the Large Plasma Device at UCLA and was successful in yielding radially localized measurements of the ion density ratio.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
2 articles.
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