• DocumentCode
    5360
  • Title

    Ball Lightning Events Explained as Self-Stable Spinning High-Density Plasma Toroids or Atmospheric Spheromaks

  • Author

    Seward, Clint

  • Author_Institution
    Electron Power Syst., Inc., Acton, MA, USA
  • Volume
    2
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    2014
  • Firstpage
    153
  • Lastpage
    159
  • Abstract
    Spinning plasma toroids, or spinning spheromaks, are reported as forming in partial atmosphere during high-power electric arc experiments. They are a new class of spheromaks because they are observed to be stable in partial atmosphere with no confining external toroidal magnetic fields, and are observed to endure for more than 600 ms. Included in this paper is a model that explains these stable plasma toroids (spheromaks); they are hollow plasma toroids with a thin outer shell of electrons and ions that all travel in parallel paths orthogonal to the toroid circumference - in effect, spiraling around the toroid. These toroids include sufficient ions to neutralize the space charge of the electrons. This model leads to the name Electron Spiral Toroid Spheromak (ESTS). The discovery of this new class of spheromaks resulted from work to explain ball lightning. A comparison is made between the experimental observations of spheromaks in partial atmosphere and reported ball lightning observations; strong similarities are reported. The ESTS is also found to have a high ion density of ~ 1019 ions/cm3 without needing any external toroidal magnetic field for containment, compared, for example, to tokamaks, with ion density limits of ~ 1015 ions/cm3. This high ion density is a defining characteristic and opens the potential to be useful in applications. The ESTS is a field reversed configuration plasma toroid.
  • Keywords
    ion density; lightning; plasma density; reversed field pinch; Electron Spiral Toroid Spheromak; atmospheric spheromaks; ball lightning events; field reversed configuration plasma toroid; high ion density; partial atmosphere; self-stable spinning high-density plasma toroids; spinning spheromaks; Atmospheric modeling; Ball lightning; Ions; Lightning; Plasmas; Toroidal magnetic fields; Ball lightning; electron spiral toroids; field reversed configuration; high ion density; plasma toroids; spheromaks;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Access, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    2169-3536
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/ACCESS.2014.2308476
  • Filename
    6748850