The behavior of a hot, magnetized plasma brought into contact with a cold wall is studied numerically in one and two dimensions. A fully nonlinear, time-dependent magnetohydrodynamic plasma model which includes thermal conduction, resistive diffusion, radiation, and ionization is used. The model is solved numerically with an Eulerian computer code which employs implicit finite difference methods. One-dimensional calculations for cylindrical geometry examine the effect of the electrical properties of the wall on the plasma. Two-dimensional calculations for cylindrical geometry show the formation of a wall-induced instability which enhances thermal conduction losses from the plasma; the re-emergence of short wavelengths, a new feature of unstable behavior, is evident in the calculations. Two-dimensional calculations for toroidal geometry show that heat losses to a cold wall lead to double-vortex convection flow of the plasma with no evidence of the formation of smaller scale convective cells.
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