Lasers as a tool for plasma diagnostics
Abstract
Lasers can be used as non-perturbative probes to measure many plasma parameters. Plasma refractivity is primarily a function of electron density, and interferometric measurements of phase changes with either pulsed or CW lasers can determine this parameter with spatial or temporal resolution over several orders of magnitude sensitivity by using laser wavelengths from the near UV to the far infrared. Laser scattering from free electrons yields the most fundamental electron temperature measurements in the plasma parameter range where individual scattering events are uncorrelated in phase and ion temperature or plasma wave and turbulence structure in the opposite limit. Laser scattering from bound electrons can be many orders of magnitude larger if the laser is matched to appropriate resonance frequencies and can be used in specialized circumstances for measuring low ionized impurity or dominant species neutral concentrations and velocities.
- Publication:
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Presented at the Los Alamos Conf. on Optics
- Pub Date:
- 1981
- Bibcode:
- 1981opti.conf.....J
- Keywords:
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- Continuous Wave Lasers;
- Electron Density (Concentration);
- Plasma Diagnostics;
- Plasma Physics;
- Pulsed Lasers;
- Electron Energy;
- Interferometers;
- Laser Applications;
- Plasmas (Physics);
- Resonance Probes;
- Stimulated Emission Devices;
- Lasers and Masers