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A Technical Introduction to Plasma Physics
· Plasma Physics Overview
Generally in our research we have a spacecraft immersed in a magnetized, cold plasma with electrons
and various species of ions; in this case a cold fluid theory can be used to describe many aspects
of the behavior of the plasma. In such a plasma, the electrons spiral about the magnetic field lines,
and move along field lines relatively unconstrained. The much more massive and less mobile ions may
be viewed as a stationary background of positive charge or may engage in limited motion depending
on the time scale of the process under consideration. There are cases in which we also must account
for the detailed electron and ion velocity distributions, in where we must employ a kinetic description
which acts as a correction to the cold fluid approach and can account for plasma wave-particle
interactions and particle acceleration. Such processes occur in a vast variety of space plasmas such
as in the high energy, accelerated electron plasma above the aurora, the solar wind plasma streaming
past the earth, and various plasma populations found in within the earth's magnetosphere and tail
region. In these regions a multitude of plasma waves are found, including Langmuir waves, lower hybrid
emissions, ion and electron cyclotron waves, and Alfvin waves. The Berkeley physics group sends
instruments out to many of these regions to make plasma and wave measurements.
· Instrumentation
The Berkeley space physics group employs two types of detectors which make complementary
measurements of space plasma processes. Various particle detectors measure the energy spectra
of ions and electrons. Of fundamental importance for a meaningful analysis of the data are the
velocity distributions of particles relative to the external magnetic field, defining a
perpendicular and a parallel velocity. Thus some of our electron and ion energy spectrometers
also resolve the angular distribution of the particles with respect to the magnetic field.
To measure waves in space plasmas, we construct long stacer booms with spherical probes near
the ends; the potential difference between pairs of probes then gives the electric field in
a given direction. For both plasma and field measurements we must consider carefully the
effects of a non-zero spacecraft potential relative to the plasma, plasma-probe coupling
issues, and contamination by sunlight and particles from photo-emission off of spacecraft
surfaces to name just a few.
· Electrostatic Analyzers
Electrostatic analyzers (ESA's) resolve particle energy spectra and angular distribution
simultaneously. A sweeping potential between the two concentric hemispheres allows particles
within a specific energy range to enter the detector undeflected. Micro-channel plates (MCP's)
are then used to amplify each particle impact into a shower of secondary electrons which are
detected by position sensitive anodes, thus resolving the polar angle from which the particle
arrived. Typical energy ranges are ~1 eV to 60 keV for electrons and ~1 eV to 20 keV for ions,
at ~64-256 ms time resolution (voltage sweep time).
· Fast Electron Spectrograph
The FES is a magnetic sector energy spectrometer used for high time resolution measurements
of the distribution of magnetic field aligned electrons. The instrument magnetic field curves
the trajectories of incoming electrons onto the MCP imaging plane as shown. The integration time
for an energy channel can be as low as ~1 ms, making this detector useful for measuring rapid
fluctuations and modulations in the precipitating electron fluxes such as those found in the
Earth's northern aurora. The energy range is typically 100 eV - 48 keV.