1–9 Aug 2024
IPP Garching, Germany
Europe/Berlin timezone

Highlights from the path toward confined e+e- pair plasmas

9 Aug 2024, 11:45
30m
Invited Plenary

Speaker

Eve Stenson (Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics)

Description

The grand challenge being pursued by the APEX (A Positron Electron eXperiment) Collaboration is to create and study cold, confined, strongly magnetized, matter-antimatter “pair plasmas” in the laboratory. This unusually simple, symmetric type of plasma has been the subject of theory/simulation predictions, in part motivated by astrophysical e+e- pair plasmas, going back over four decades; we would like to test some of these experimentally. Our path to pair plasmas involves joining together and further developing state-of-the-art physics and engineering in several disciplines. This talk will give an overview of recent highlights ---including novel techniques in the areas of positron beams, non-neutral plasmas, and gamma diagnostics --- as well as the progress on our two, complementary, tabletop-sized, pair-plasma traps: a levitated dipole and an optimized stellarator, both based on small, non-insulated, HTS (high-temperature superconducting) coils. Finally, I will describe our plans for the few next year(s), when we will put all of these elements together.

Primary author

Eve Stenson (Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics)

Presentation materials