DavidWillard wrote:I like this analogy, but have a question.
Since the fuel ions are charged, near and being impinged on by the magnetic field, they are also spiraling in the direction of the flux. The marble in the funnel is spiraling towards the exit, but there are other ways it can spin as it heads that direction right. not only clockwise and counter clockwise ?
So are you approximating the flux direction is like gravity on the marble?
Yes- the flux lines flow parallel to the Wiffleball surface, so in this simple model I imagine the electrons bounce like a ball off a floor (or inside a "Wiffle Ball"). There is not any spiral or angular momentum introduced by the ball bouncing around the throat of a cusp. In reality, the picture is more complex. The direction of the poles (North or South) are unimportant so long as they are the same direction.
I've wondered if having the polarity arranged so that the electron completes its' 1/2 gyro radius spiral around the border field line in a direction that tends to throw it back more towards the center, rather than the opposite side of the cusp throat might help. I have never seen mention of this, so I guess it is not significant. If the local coulomb collisions in these throat (funnel) areas dominate the the effect would be damped out. And, if most electrons are trapped on the field lines ,and before escape, oscillate back and forth on it then this back and forth motion for thousands (100,000 ?) of times makes the significance of the direction of the first magnetic deflection unimportant. Also, in this multicusp system, if the magnetic flux traped electron is avoiding (for its' first oscillation) one cusp, it would only be thrown towards another cusp.
In the DPF, there is apparently a considerable significance to the spiralling (angular momentum introduced by a background magnetic field as weak as the Earth's field) of the charged particles helping to form a tight ..um.. focus. I don't know whether this would have any significance in a Polywell system.
Then, add possible spinning plasmas, pulsating conditions, electrostatic interactions of the charged particles within the cusp and cusp throats, etc. and the picture can only become even more murky. I guess that is why people do experiments.
Dan Tibbets
To error is human... and I'm very human.