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Books > Science & Mathematics > Physics > States of matter > Plasma physics
This book is on inertial confinement fusion, an alternative way to
produce electrical power from hydrogen fuel by using powerful
lasers or particle beams. Two huge laser facilities are presently
under construction to show that this method works. It involves the
compression of tiny amounts (micrograms) of fuel to thousand times
solid density and pressures otherwise existing only in the centre
of stars. Thanks to advances in laser technology, it is now
possible to produce such extreme states of matter in the
laboratory. Recent developments have boosted laser intensities
again with new possibilities for laser particle accelerators, laser
nuclear physics, and fast ignition of fusion targets. This is a
reference book for those working on beam plasma physics, be it in
the context of fundamental research or applications to fusion
energy or novel ultra-bright laser sources. The book combines quite
different areas of physics: beam target interaction, dense plasmas,
hydrodynamic implosion and instabilities, radiative energy transfer
as well as fusion reactions. Particular attention is given to
simple and useful modeling, including dimensional analysis and
similarity solutions. Both authors have worked in this field for
more than 20 years. They want to address in particular those
teaching this topic to students and all those interested in
understanding the technical basis.
This book offers the foundation for research on nuclear medicine
and low temperature plasma applications in multiple industries and
daily life. This book is beneficial for those wishing to advance
their knowledge of the physics of plasma medicine, plasma
agriculture and industrial applications. It provides a
comprehensive overview of the basic Fundamental Science of Low
Temperature Plasma (FS-LTP) knowledge required for the practice of
medical physics in modern medicine. This book provides a guide of
nuclear medicine that is the exercise of using radionuclides in
medicine for diagnosis, staging of disease, therapy and monitoring
the response of a disease process. This book comprehensively covers
a broad range of topic including but not limited to field of Plasma
Oncology and Plasma Medicine with many applications including,
agriculture, plasma processing, catalysis, and aerospace
engineering.
Adopting a novel approach, this book provides a unique "molecular
perspective" on plasmonics, concisely presenting the fundamentals
and applications in a way suitable for beginners entering this hot
field as well as for experienced researchers and
practitioners.
It begins by introducing readers to the optical effects that occur
at the nanoscale and particularly their modification in the
presence of biomolecules, followed by a concise yet thorough
overview of the different methods for the actual fabrication of
nano-optical materials. Further chapters address the relevant
nano-optics, as well as the various approaches to combining
nanostructures and biomolecules to achieve certain desired
functionalities for applications in the fields of probing, sensing
and particle manipulation.
For analytical biologists, physical chemists, materials scientists
and medicinal chemists.
In June of 1996, at the seaside resort of Guaruja, Brazil, a
renowned group of researchers in space and astrophysical plasmas
met to provide a forum on advanced topics on astrophysical and
space plasmas at a school consisting of some 60 students and
teachers, mainly from Brazil and Argentina, but also from all the
other parts of the globe. The purpose was to provide an update on
the latest theories, observations, and simulations of
space-astrophysical plasma phenomena. The topics covered included:
space plasma mechanisms for particle acceleration, nonthermal
emission in cosmic plasma, magnetohydrodynamic instabilities in
solar, interstellar, and other cosmic objects, magnetic field line
reconnection and merging, the nonlinear and often chaotic structure
of astrophysical plasmas, and the advances in high performance
supercomputing resources to replicate the observed phenomena. The
lectures were presented by Professor Mark Birkinshaw of the
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and the University of
Bristol; Dr Anthony Peratt, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Scientific Advisor to the United States Department of Energy; Dr
Dieter Biskamp of the Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics,
Garching, Germany; Professor Donald Melrose, Director, Centre for
Theoretical Astrophysics, University of Sydney, Australia;
Professor Abraham Chian of the National Institute for Space
Research, Brazil; and Professor Nelson Fiedler-Ferrara of the
University of Sao Paulo, Brazil. As summarized by Professor Reuven
Opher, Institute of Astronomy and Geophysics, University of Sao
Paulo, the advanced or interested student of space and
astrophysical plasmas will find reference to nearly all modern
aspects in the field of Plasma Astrophysics and Cosmology in the
presented lectures.
The workshop covered experimental and theoretical topics of current
interest on plasma research.
This book describes the design, physics, and performance of high
density plasma sources which have been extensively explored in low
pressure plasma processing, such as plasma etching and
planarization, plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition of thin
films, sputtered deposition of metals and dielectrics, epitaxial
growth of silicon and GaAs, and many other applications. This is a
comprehensive survey and a detailed description of most advanced
high density plasma sources used in plasma processing. The book is
a balanced presentation in that it gives both a theoretical
treatment and practical applications. It should be of considerable
interest to scientists and engineers working on plasma source
design, and process development.
This revised and enlarged second edition of the popular textbook
and reference contains comprehensive treatments of both the
established foundations of magnetic fusion plasma physics and of
the newly developing areas of active research. It concludes with a
look ahead to fusion power reactors of the future. The
well-established topics of fusion plasma physics -- basic plasma
phenomena, Coulomb scattering, drifts of charged particles in
magnetic and electric fields, plasma confinement by magnetic
fields, kinetic and fluid collective plasma theories, plasma
equilibria and flux surface geometry, plasma waves and
instabilities, classical and neoclassical transport,
plasma-materials interactions, radiation, etc. -- are fully
developed from first principles through to the computational models
employed in modern plasma physics.
The new and emerging topics of fusion plasma physics research --
fluctuation-driven plasma transport and gyrokinetic/gyrofluid
computational methodology, the physics of the divertor, neutral
atom recycling and transport, impurity ion transport, the physics
of the plasma edge (diffusive and non-diffusive transport, MARFEs,
ELMs, the L-H transition, thermal-radiative instabilities, shear
suppression of transport, velocity spin-up), etc. -- are
comprehensively developed and related to the experimental evidence.
Operational limits on the performance of future fusion reactors are
developed from plasma physics and engineering constraints, and
conceptual designs of future fusion power reactors are
discussed.
Proceedings of the International Conference on Advanced
Diagnostics for Magnetic and Inertial Fusion, held September 3-7,
2001 at Villa Monastero, Varenna, Italy.
This volume focuses on future diagnostic requirements for fusion
energy research emphasizing advanced diagnostics, new techniques
and areas where further progress is required.
Edward Teller Medalists: Laser Fusion Research in 30 Years (C.
Yamanaka). New Basic Physics Derived from Laser Plasma Interaction
(H. Hora). Lasers: Demonstration of a Nuclear FlashPumped Iodine
Laser (G. Miley, W. Williams). Progress in ICF and XRay Laser
Experiments at CAEP (H.S. Peng et al.). Interaction Mechanisms:
Distributed Absorption and Inhibited Heat Transport (J.S. DeGroot
et al.). A Survey of Ion Acoustic Decay Instabilities in Laser
Produced Plasma (K. Mizuno). Inertial Fusion Energy Strategy:
Advancement of Inertial Fusion Research (C. Yamanaka). Inertial
Fusion Energy Results: Interaction Physics for Megajoule Laser
Fusion Targets (W.L. Kruer). Related Ion Beam Interactions:
Focusing and Propagation of the Proton Beam (K. Niu). Basic
Phenomena: Acceleration of Electrons by Lasers in Vacuum (T. Hauser
et al.). 37 additional articles. Index.
Life was simple when the dynamic, the spectral and the resolving
powers of our instruments were small. One observed whole objects -
planets, stars, sunspots, galaxies, often in rainbow colours. Then
the revolution occurred: we acquired the centimetric eyes, the mil
limetric eyes, the infrared eyes, the ultraviolet eyes, the X-ray
eyes and the, -ray eyes. With these we see mottles on the surface
of stars, streams in sunspots, and spirals in nuclei of galaxies.
We see regions of multiple mass densities and temperatures in a
precari ous balance, losing it occasionally, exhaling flares. The
universe is timed, cosmic phenomena are clocked; eternity is lost
and variabil ity is bought. Microarcsecond resolutions revealed
stirring and siz zling interiors underneath serene surfaces. Short
durations and small scales demanded employing a discipline with
similar attributes - the discipline of Plasmas and Fluids - known
more for its complexity than for its felicity. Some would like to
wish it away. We shall learn about plasmas for it is too little
familiarity that breeds fear. Complexity can be systemized, to a
large extent, by looking for a common denominator among apparently
disparate phe nomena. It is not immediately obvious what the
contents and the style of a graduate level course on plasmas and
fluids aimed at understanding astrophysical phenomena should be.
Plasmas and fluids are huge subjects by themselves. The cosmic
phenomena where plasmas and fluids playa definite role are equally
diverse and numerous."
A discussion of explosive pulsed power systems and their applications, this book consists of 7 chapters. The first five describe the basic physics of these sources and their ancillary equipment, based on a manual for training engineers in Russia. Chapter 6 is a description of codes and methodologies used at Loughborough University in the UK to build flux compressors, while Chapter 7 covers two specific applications: high power lasers and high power microwave sources. The book introduces all types of explosive power sources and their ancillary equipment, the procedures required to build them, and specific applications.
Since its launch in 1991, the Yohkoh satellite has been returning
unprecedented observations of solar flares and the dynamic solar
corona. This book is a collection of papers presented at a meeting
held in: Yoyogi, Tokyo, on the occasion of Yohkoh's fifth
anniversary of operation. The papers constitute a summary of
observations and results over the five years, including
contributions based on data from Yohkoh's hard and soft X-ray
telescopes and its spectrometer experiments. The five years of
data, covering approximately one-half of a solar cycle, reveal a
fresh perspective on solar science, with a new picture of solar
flares and the active Sun emerging. Also, for the first time there
are extensive results from Yohkoh observations of the Sun during
the solar minimum period. This wide-ranging volume will be of
interest to workers in solar physics and X-ray astronomy. It also
contains material appropriate for supplemental reading for graduate
students in solar physics.
A Corotating Interaction Region (CIR) is the result of the
interaction of fast solar wind with slower solar wind ahead. CIRs
have a very large three-dimensional ex tent and are the dominant
large-scale structure in the heliosphere on the declining and
minimum phase of the solar activity cycle. Until recently, however,
CIRs could only be observed close to the ecliptic plane, and their
three-dimensional structure was therefore not obvious to observers
and theoreticians alike. Ulysses was the first spacecraft allowing
direct exploration of the third dimen sion of the heliosphere.
Since 1992, when it has entered a polar orbit that takes it 0 up to
80 latitude, the spacecraft's performance has been flawless and the
mission has provided excellent data from a superbly matched set of
instruments. Perhaps the most exciting observation during Ulysses'
first passage towards the south pole of the Sun was a strong and
long lasting CIR whose energetic particle effects were observed up
to unexpectedly high latitudes. These observations, documented in a
number of publications, stimulated considerable new theoretical
work.
Les deuxiernes "Rencontres de l'Observatoire", qui ont eu lieu a
l'Observatoire de Paris a Meudon du 10 au 14 Janvier 2000, ont
reuni autour du theme "Problernes ernergents en physique de
I'espace" 120 physiciens et astrophysiciens venus d'une vingtaine
de pays differents. Nous avons voulu honorer a cette occasion
Jean-Louis Steinberg pour ses con- tributions majeures a la
recherche spatiale, ala radioastronomie et a la physique de
I'espace. L'approche explicitement pluridisciplinaire de ce
colloque, qui ne s'est pas laisse confiner dans les limites
etroites de la physique spatiale ni dans celles imposees par
certains programmes officiels, suit l'esprit de sa carriere
scientifique: sortir des limites des sujets deja etudies ou sur Ie
point de l'etre, et appliquer les connaissances acquises pour
explorer de nouveaux domaines. Ce dernier quart de siecle a vu une
croissance vertigineuse des performances spatiales. La technologie
moderne ne perrnet pas encore de jongler avec les univers comme Ie
prestidigitateur de Grandville (Grandville, Un autre monde, ed. H.
Four- nier, Paris, 1844); mais quelques decades ont suffi pour voir
des instruments soph- istiques explorer les frontieres du systerne
solaire, et la cornmunaute de la recher- che spatiale a depasse
rapidement Ie sujet etroit de I'environnement soleil-terre pour
s'interesser a I'ensemble de l'heliosphere, OU les memes processus
physiques sont a I'ceuvre.
Modulational Interactions in Plasmas is the first book to present
all the basic considerations relevant to the topic. It adopts a
simple and universal approach, based on new methods developed for
the description of modulation interactions in arbitrary media.
Emphasis is given to the role of modulational interactions in
fundamental topics, such as laser acceleration, the generation of
strong magnetic fields, r.f. plasma heating and current drive,
physical phenomena in active geophysical and space experiments,
interactions of r.f. radiation with the ionosphere, etc. The
methods employed can also be applied to other areas of physics.
Audience: Researchers in plasma and laser physics, and nonlinear
optics.
A "z pinch" is a deceptively simple plasma configuration in which a
longitudinal current produces a magnetic field that confines the
plasma. Z-pinch research is currently one of the fastest growing
areas of plasma physics, with revived interest in z-pinch
controlled fusion reactors along with investigations of new z-pinch
applications, such as very high power x-ray sources, high-energy
neutrons sources, and ultra-high magnetic fields generators. This
book provides a comprehensive review of the physics of dense z
pinches and includes many recent experimental results.
Features Introduces the physics of accelerators, lasers, and plasma
in tandem with the industrial methodology of inventiveness.
Outlines a path from idea to practical implementation of scientific
and technological innovation. Contains more than 380 illustrations
and numerous end-of-chapter exercises.
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