Sample records for ixion

  1. Son of IXION: A Steady State Centrifugally Confined Plasma for Fusion*

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hassam, Adil

    1996-11-01

    A magnetic confinement scheme in which the inertial, u.grad(u), forces effect parallel confinement is proposed. The basic geometry is mirror-like as far as the poloidal field goes or, more simply, multipole (FM-1) type. The rotation is toroidal in this geometry. A supersonic rotation can effect complete parallel confinement, with the usual magnetic mirror force rendered irrelevant. The rotation shear, in addition, aids in the suppression of the flute mode. This suppression is not complete which indicates the addition of a toroidal field, at maximum of the order of the poloidal field. We show that at rotation in excess of Mach 3, the parallel particle and heat losses can be minimized to below the Lawson breakeven point. The crossfield transport can be expected to be better than tokamaks on account of the large velocity shear. Other advantages of the scheme are that it is steady state and disruption free. An exploratory experiment that tests equilibrium, parallel detachment, and MHD stability is proposed. The concept resembles earlier (Geneva, 1958) experiments on "homopolar generators" and a mirror configuration called IXION. Ixion, Greek mythological king, was forever strapped to a rotating, flaming wheel. *Work supported by DOE

  2. Ixion: A Wet-Lab Habitat Platform for Leo and the Deep Space Gateway

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wald, S. I.; Cummins, C. K.; Manber, J.

    2018-02-01

    Cislunar and LEO habitats derived from launch vehicle upper stages are technically feasible and continues development toward flight. Present station specifications, configurations, and concepts for scientific, exploration, and commercial utilization.

  3. Trajectories of charged particles in radial electric and uniform axial magnetic fields

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Englert, G. W.

    1979-01-01

    Trajectories of charged particles were determined over a wide range of parameters characterizing motion in cylindrical low-pressure gas discharges and plasma heating devices which have steady radial electric fields perpendicular to uniform steady magnetic fields. Consideration was given to radial distributions characteristic of fields measured in a modified Penning discharge, in two NASA Lewis burnout-type plasma heating devices, and that estimated for the Ixion device. Numerical calculations of trajectories for such devices showed that differences between cyclotron frequency and qB/m and between azimuthal drift and a guiding center approximation are appreciable.

  4. Photometric Study Of 28978 Ixion At Small Phase Angle

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Rousselot, Philippe; Petit, J.

    2010-10-01

    Discovered in 2001, the Kuiper Belt Object 28978 Ixion belongs to the dynamical class of Plutinos. Because of its brightness (R magnitude about 19.5) it has been extensively studied, its diameter and albedo being estimated by Spitzer to be about 570 km and 15% (Stansberry et al., 2008). Absorption feature of cristalline water ice has been detected (Merlin et al., 2010) and negative linear polarisation has been measured (Boehnhardt et al., 2004). So far no lightcurve nor phase curve at very small phase angle has been published, the only information being that the lightcurve amplitude was inferior to 0.15 magnitude (Ortiz et al., 2003). We present new photometric observations obtained with the 3.5-m telescope NTT at the European Southern Observatory with broad band filters (B, V, R and I). These observations permit to derive a rotation period of 15.9+/-0.5 hr (if a single-peaked lightcurve is assumed) with a peak to peak amplitude of 0.06+/-0.03 magnitude. The phase curve does not reveal any bright opposition surge even for very small phase angle (α=0.02 deg). When our data are combined with the one of Boehnhardt et al. (up to α=1.34 deg) a linear fit provides a slope of 0.201+/-0.014 mag/deg. References : Boehnhardt H., Bagnulo S., Muinonen K. et al., 2004, A&A 415, L21-L25 Merlin F., Barucci M.A., de Bergh C. et al., 2010, Icarus 208, 945-954 Ortiz J.L., Gutiérrez P.J., Casanova V., Sota A., 2003, A&A 407, 1149-1155 Stansberry J., Grundy W., Brown M. et al., 2008, The Solar System Beyond Neptune, Univ. of Arizona Press, pp161-179

  5. A Digital Video System for Observing and Recording Occultations

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Barry, M. A. Tony; Gault, Dave; Pavlov, Hristo; Hanna, William; McEwan, Alistair; Filipović, Miroslav D.

    2015-09-01

    Stellar occultations by asteroids and outer solar system bodies can offer ground based observers with modest telescopes and camera equipment the opportunity to probe the shape, size, atmosphere, and attendant moons or rings of these distant objects. The essential requirements of the camera and recording equipment are: good quantum efficiency and low noise; minimal dead time between images; good horological faithfulness of the image timestamps; robustness of the recording to unexpected failure; and low cost. We describe an occultation observing and recording system which attempts to fulfil these requirements and compare the system with other reported camera and recorder systems. Five systems have been built, deployed, and tested over the past three years, and we report on three representative occultation observations: one being a 9 ± 1.5 s occultation of the trans-Neptunian object 28978 Ixion (m v =15.2) at 3 seconds per frame; one being a 1.51 ± 0.017 s occultation of Deimos, the 12 km diameter satellite of Mars, at 30 frames per second; and one being a 11.04 ± 0.4 s occultation, recorded at 7.5 frames per second, of the main belt asteroid 361 Havnia, representing a low magnitude drop (Δm v = ~0.4) occultation.

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