Magnetic Confinement of an Ultracold Neutral Plasma

ORAL

Abstract

Ultracold neutral plasmas (UNPs), created by photoionization of a cold gas, are an excellent tool for studying strongly coupled plasmas, in which the ratio of the nearest neighbor Coulomb energy to the average thermal energy, $\Gamma_{i}$, is greater than one. Magnetized UNPs are of current interest because of the interplay of magnetization and strong coupling, connection to plasma confinement, and modification of recombination dynamics in strong fields. Here, we demonstrate magnetic confinement of an UNP within the same quadrupole magnetic fields used in the magneto-optical trapping of the initial atom cloud. Preliminary results show that the plasma expansion is initially unaffected by the presence of the magnetic field, but after a time that scales with $\sigma(0)/\sqrt{T_e}$, where $\sigma(0)$ is the initial plasma size and $T_{e}$ is the electron temperature, the expansion essentially ceases and the density stabilizes. We will also discuss complications for the laser-induced-fluorescence ion imaging arising from the presence of magnetic fields.

*Research supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research through grant FA9550-17-1-0391 and the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program under grant No.1450681.

Authors

  • Grant Gorman

    • Rice University
  • MacKenzie Warrens

    • Rice University
  • Thomas Killian

    • Rice University
    • Rice University and Rice Center for Quantum Materials