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JOURNALS // Teplofizika vysokikh temperatur // Archive

TVT, 2020 Volume 58, Issue 4, Pages 485–514 (Mi tvt11349)

This article is cited in 10 papers

Plasma Investigations

Study of the dusty-gas discharge plasma in the Plasma Crystal-3 Plus space laboratory (review)

A. M. Lipaevab, V. I. Molotkova, D. I. Zhukhovitskiĭa, V. N. Naumkina, A. D. Usacheva, A. V. Zobnina, O. F. Petrovab, V. E. Fortova

a Joint Institute for High Temperatures, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow
b Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (National Research University), Dolgoprudny, Moscow Region

Abstract: The main results of a completed cycle of complex studies of a strongly coupled dusty plasma conducted in the unique, experimental Plasma Crystal-3 Plus space laboratory that operated on the International Space Station are discussed. The experiments on the physics of phenomena in the dusty plasma are analyzed. A new state of dusty plasma, the electrorheological plasma, in which there is a transition from an isotropic plasma-dusty liquid to an anisotropic state, is studied. The study of the interpenetration of particles streams of various diameters, a nonequilibrium transition, is described. Experimental studies of the liquid–crystal phase transition in a three-dimensional dusty plasma system in which it is established that the dust component is compressed and crystallized upon a decrease in the neutral gas pressure are discussed. The nearly free motion of large particles in the volume of a plasma crystal, a nonviscous, irrotational flow about a large particle by a “liquid” of small dust particles, is analyzed. An experimental study of the dynamics of the crystallization of three-dimensional plasma-dust systems at a constant argon pressure under the effect of a low-frequency, alternating electric field and without its influence under microgravity conditions is described. The formation of the crystallization front and its propagation in the three-dimensional plasma-dust system with a velocity on the order of the average interparticle distance per second were discovered.

UDC: 533.9...15

Received: 29.02.2020
Revised: 10.03.2020
Accepted: 10.03.2020

DOI: 10.31857/S0040364420040092


 English version:
High Temperature, 2020, 58:4, 449–475

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