“…For instance, the Big Red Ball [35] and the Plasma Couette eXperiment [36] at the University of Wisconsin implement the interaction of large current injection from emissive cathodes with large-scale or multipolar magnetic fields to study laboratory astrophysical relevant phenomena such as the dynamo instability, the magnetorotational instability or the dynamic of the Parker spiral in the solar wind [37]. Hot emissive cathodes immersed in a preexisting plasma also shed new light on transport and plasma turbulence in magnetized plasma columns [38,39], plasma flow generation [40,41], or the dynamic of interacting plasma filaments [42,43]. The control of electric fields perpendicular to the ambient magnetic field is also crucial for a number of applications of E × B configurations [44], and among them, high-throughput plasma mass separation [45,46].…”