DocumentCode
2214235
Title
Flying plasma disks in basalt microwave furnace
Author
Dikhtyar, V. ; Einat, M. ; Jerby, E.
Author_Institution
Fac. of Eng., Tel Aviv Univ., Israel
fYear
2002
fDate
26-30 May 2002
Firstpage
323
Abstract
Summary form only given, as follows. Our experiments study microwave heating phenomena of small basalt stones (/spl sim/10 cm/sup 3/) in a rectangular cavity (WR340) powered by a 650 W, 2.45 GHz magnetron. Occasionally, we observe the creation of a silvery cloud of plasma, in a disk shape. This occurs first on the top of the basalt stone. Then, the plasma ring (of 2-3 cm diameter) is flying about 20 cm from the stone along the cavity to the magnetron antenna, where it disappears. Soon after, another plasma ring is generated near the stone, flies to the magnetron, and repeatedly. The repetition period and the flying disk life cycle are approximately I sec. The effect is accompanied by a unique sound, and it ceases after 15-20 sec of heating when ordinary heating effects occur. We interpret the flying disks as plasmoids produced by a nonlinear interaction of non-stationary standing microwaves with the stone´s surface. The paper discusses this effect in view of Kapitza´s idea on spherical plasmoids (lighting fireballs) generated by intensive standing radio-waves, in atmosphere and in laboratory experiments. Astrophysics and geophysics effects related to our observation are discussed as well.
Keywords
furnaces; plasma heating; 2.45 GHz; 650 W; Basalt microwave furnace; Kapitza´s idea; astrophysics; disk shape; flying plasma disks; geophysics; intensive standing radio-waves; laboratory experiments; lighting fireballs; microwave heating; nonlinear interaction; nonstationary standing microwaves; plasma ring; plasmoids; silvery plasma cloud; spherical plasmoids; Clouds; Electromagnetic heating; Electron beams; Furnaces; Heat engines; Ion beams; Laboratories; Plasmas; Power engineering and energy; Shape;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Plasma Science, 2002. ICOPS 2002. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts. The 29th IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Banff, Alberta, Canada
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7407-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PLASMA.2002.1030655
Filename
1030655
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