2011
DOI: 10.1063/1.3584969
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Note: Flowing ion population from a resonance cavity source

Abstract: The experimental low energy plasma for hemispherical analyzers nominal testing thermal plasma facility of Dartmouth College uses a microwave plasma source which generates an ionosphere-like plasma through a two-step process. The plasma is initially generated inside a cylindrical, insulated, resonance cavity. This initial plasma must pass through a sheath in order to enter the main experimental region. This process imparts a significant flow velocity to the ions which has been neglected in previous analysis of … Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…29 In our system, the ion beam velocity is !8c s , where c s is the ion sound speed. 18 We do know that the magnitude of the ion beam velocity from the source did not change over the course of our data collection. 17 Given these facts, we approximated the ion current to the sphere as n o ev ib A xs , where v ib is the ion beam velocity and A xs is the cross sectional area of the sphere.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…29 In our system, the ion beam velocity is !8c s , where c s is the ion sound speed. 18 We do know that the magnitude of the ion beam velocity from the source did not change over the course of our data collection. 17 Given these facts, we approximated the ion current to the sphere as n o ev ib A xs , where v ib is the ion beam velocity and A xs is the cross sectional area of the sphere.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The stream of ions has an energy of approximately 13 eV (Ref. 18), but we do not exactly know how the flow of ions interacts with the sheath of the sphere to give the total magnitude of ion current density to the sphere's surface. Other authors show that when k D % a, for subsonic ion velocities, more ions are collected on the side of the sphere away from the ion source than on the side facing it.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The high count rate cutoff occurs when the instrument is saturated by the large particle fluxes. We have quantified the saturation limit of the HT by testing a flight spare detector in the Dartmouth ELEPHANT (Experimental Low Energy Plasma for Hemispherical Analyzer Nominal Testing) calibration chamber facility [ Frederick‐Frost and Lynch , ; Gayetsky and Lynch , ; Siddiqui et al , ]. Count rates greater than 130 kHz in our example detector cause distortion in pitch angle imaging due to saturation.…”
Section: Example Instrumentationmentioning
confidence: 99%