Laboratory experiments on the electrodynamic behavior of tethers in space
Abstract
The transient current systems between tethered plasmas in a large magnetoplasma are investigated experimentally for extrapolation to electrodynamic tethers in space. The studies measure the perturbed magnetic fields and the current density associated with pulsed currents to electrodes in three-dimensional space and time. The electrodes excite electron whistlers because they produce fields that dominantly couple to electrons, allowing pulsed currents to propagate and disperse as whistler wave packets. The wave packets evolve into force-free, flux-ropelike field configurations, and a whistler 'wedge' is formed in the plasma due to 'eddy' currents caused by insulated tethers with dc currents. Substantial radiation into the whistler mode happens with moving VLF antennas as well as tethers, and the wave spread within the ray cone is the most significant characteristic event. The wave spread widens the current channel, incites current closure, and is also associated with a 'phantom loop' phenomenon.
- Publication:
-
Space Manufacturing 8 - Energy and Materials from Space
- Pub Date:
- June 1991
- Bibcode:
- 1991aiaa.confS....S
- Keywords:
-
- Electrodynamics;
- Plasma Currents;
- Plasma Physics;
- Tetherlines;
- Electric Conductors;
- Magnetic Field Configurations;
- Wave Excitation;
- Plasma Physics