MSimon wrote:They bounce around.
From what I'm reading in Valencia, they don't have to. The KV injected electrons bang the electrons off of them, and those electrons cascade into others, etc. The e-folding dominates. Meanwhile, new hot electrons are banging into those liberated from the ions and heating them. Pretty quickly you get a deep well of hot electrons.
chrismb wrote:TallDave wrote:I'm not sure how to calculate an ionizing MFP in an electron cascade, though I'm pretty sure they don't travel 10m in a few usecs.
If a boron neutral is gonna ionise to a 5+ in the first few cms of the outer edge, then why does that mean anything other than indicating the electrons there will have a potential of over 600eV and a density of over 10^21/m3 [which is definitely not the picture of 'low energy' nor 'low density' electrons that reside in the outer edge of a Polywell that folks have alluded to]?
Well, at startup, before the well forms, the electrons are being injected hot. The electrons then smear over the volume of the WB interior, with their average position being in the core where they are slowest (high potential energy, low velocity), so at any given time the density is highest at the core (thus creating a virtual cathode). They will naturally have their highest average velocity near the magrid (the bottom of their inverted well)... but electrons that lose their potential energy
and velocity will end up stuck at the bottom of their well near the casings, and leave the system (according to Rick). That's the only place I can see that an ion might occasionally briefly acquire an electron (via a collision with total energy < 671 eV) before a hot electron knocks it off again (ions at low energy are a fat target). The first time it hits anything not at the very lowest end of the energy distribution, it's going to be fully ionized again.
So: generally low density, high energy edges, with cold electrons accumulating at coils and cusps. For electrons, it's an inverted well. The ions get focused at high energy because they converge at the center, the electrons get defocused (spread around the edge) because their "bottom" diverges.
MSimon wrote:Let me see if I can explain it. Near the most positive potential in the system the positively charged ions will be the slowest.
Yes. They will have low radial velocity there, and some small transverse velocity (which will tend to maxwellianize due to the high collision cross-section, leaving a relatively monoenergetic total energy (large radial potential + small maxwellian transverse velocity)).
Kite -- Yeah, that's odd, I don't know about that.
Did Rick ever give us an optimum p-B11 well depth? I can't remember.
n*kBolt*Te = B**2/(2*mu0) and B^.25 loss scaling? Or not so much? Hopefully we'll know soon...