Three-dimensional (3D) particle-in-cell simulations of collisionless magnetic reconnection are presented. The initial equilibrium is a double Harris-sheet equilibrium and periodic boundary conditions are assumed in all three directions. No magnetic seed island is imposed initially, and no flow conditions are imposed. The current sheet width is assumed to be one ion inertial length calculated with the density in the center of the current sheet. The ion to electron mass ratio is mi/me=150, which suppresses the growth of the drift kink instability. Two different runs have been performed: a simulation with exactly antiparallel magnetic field and a simulation with a constant guide field of the same magnitude as the antiparallel field superimposed. In the antiparallel case the inductive field of the waves excited by the lower hybrid drift instability (LHDI) leads to rapid acceleration of the electrons in the center of the current sheet and subsequently to a current sheet thinning. The current increase in the center is balanced by reverse currents in the gradient region. In the thin current sheet rapid reconnection sets in which self-organizes into a two-dimensional structure with a single X line. However, ∼15% of the total flux is reconnected while reconnection is still patchy and 3D. In the guide field case the growth rate of the LHDI is reduced, but leads nevertheless after a considerably longer time to electron acceleration in the current sheet center and to a thinning of the current layer, followed by single X line reconnection. It is suggested that electron acceleration due to LHDI in current sheets of the order of the ion scale results in rapid onset of reconnection.
The Helias reactor is an upgraded version of the Wendelstein 7-X experiment. A straightforward extrapolation of Wendelstein 7-X leads to HSR5/22, which has 5 field periods and a major radius of 22 m. HSR4/18 is a more compact Helias reactor with 4 field periods and an 18 m major radius. Stability limit and energy confinement times are nearly the same as in HSR5/22, thus the same fusion power (3000 MW) is expected in both configurations. Neoclassical transport in HSR4/18 is very low, and the effective helical ripple is below 1%. The article describes the power balance of the Helias reactor, and the blanket and maintenance concepts. The coil system of HSR4/18 comprises 40 modular coils with NbTi superconducting cables. The reduction from 5 to 4 field periods and the concomitant reduction in size will also reduce the cost of the Helias reactor.
It is shown that the collisionless transformation of locally trapped and passing particle orbits in the optimized stellarators of the Wendelstein line results in stochastic diffusion of energetic ions. This diffusion can lead to the loss of a significant fraction of the energetic ion population from the region where the characteristic diffusion time is small compared to the slowing down time. The loss region and losses can be minimized by shaping the plasma temperature and density profiles so that they satisfy certain requirements. The predictions of the theory developed here are in agreement with the results of numerical modeling of α-particle confinement in a Helias reactor, which has been carried out with the use of an orbit following code.
Investigations of shear flows in three-dimensional complex-plasma fluids produced in a dc discharge were carried out. The shear was induced either by an inhomogeneous gas flow or by a laser beam. The viscosity of complex plasmas was measured over a broad range of shear rates, up to the hydrodynamic limit when the discreteness becomes important. Analysis of the measurements reveals non-Newtonian behavior of complex plasmas accompanied by substantial shear thinning.
Abstract. The visualization and subsequent assessment of the inner human bone structures play an important role for better understanding the disease-or drug-induced changes of bone in the context of osteoporosis giving prospect for better predictions of bone strength and thus of the fracture risk of osteoporotic patients. In this work, we show how the complex trabecular bone structure can be visualized using µCT imaging techniques at an isotropic resolution of 26 µm. We quantify these structures by calculating global and local topological and morphological measures, namely Minkowski functionals (MFs) and utilizing the (an-)isotropic scaling index method (SIM) and by deriving suitable texture measures based on MF and SIM. Using a sample of 151 specimens taken from human vertebrae in vitro, we correlate the texture measures with the mechanically measured maximum compressive strength 7 Author to whom any correspondence should be addressed. New Journal of Physics 10 (2008) 1250101367-2630/08/125010+18$30.00 © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft 2 (MCS), which quantifies the strength of the bone probe, by using Pearson's correlation coefficient. The structure parameters derived from the local measures yield good correlations with the bone strength as measured in mechanical tests. We investigate whether the performance of the texture measures depends on the MCS value by selecting different subsamples according to MCS. Considering the whole sample the results for the newly defined parameters are better than those obtained for the standard global histomorphometric parameters except for bone volume/total volume (BV/TV). If a subsample consisting only of weak bones is analysed, the local structural analysis leads to similar and even better correlations with MCS as compared to BV/TV. Thus, the MF and SIM yield additional information about the stability of the bone especially in the case of weak bones, which corroborates the hypothesis that the bone structure (and not only its mineral mass) constitutes an important component of bone stability. Contents
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