So does a cube - there are 3 faces off each vertex (corner).scareduck wrote: This is what I keep coming back to: a dodecahedron has an odd number of faces off each vertex. It seems wholly inexplicable, then, that he would choose it if it didn't meet this requirement, or that he would bring this up if it were irrelevant.
The 2x2-B experiment had a "baseball" coil at the end as well as a normal coil to help prevent instabilities. The field lines in the center of the mirror expand out so that was one way to help prevent problems.
The polywell is a pure mirror, but in a sphere. That is the genius of it. Looking out from the center, in every direction there is a mirror field.
The peak mirror field will be near a corner, the weakest mirror will be the center of any one coil.
It is well known that a plasma is more stable near a B field of negative radius of curvature - meaning the plasma is outside the strongest point in the field. Cusp plasmas were studied a lot in the 1940's and 50's. Again this points out the genius of polywell - the center is a 3D cusp.
It may not matter that much how many coils there are, but we know nature likes symmetry a lot. I'm betting 6 or 12 coils will be optimal for lots of reasons.