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Dive into the research topics where A. Ciardi is active.

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Featured researches published by A. Ciardi.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

Episodic Magnetic Bubbles and Jets: Astrophysical Implications from Laboratory Experiments

A. Ciardi; S. V. Lebedev; Adam Frank; Francisco Suzuki-Vidal; G. Hall; S. N. Bland; A. J. Harvey-Thompson; Eric G. Blackman; Max Camenzind

Collimated outflows (jets) are ubiquitous in the universe, appearing around sources as diverse as protostars and extragalactic supermassive black holes. Jets are thought to be magnetically collimated, and launched from a magnetized accretion disk surrounding a compact gravitating object. We have developed the first laboratory experiments to address time-dependent, episodic phenomena relevant to the poorly understood jet acceleration and collimation region. The experimental results show the periodic ejections of magnetic bubbles naturally evolving into a heterogeneous jet propagating inside a channel made of self-collimated magnetic cavities. The results provide a unique view of the possible transition from a relatively steady-state jet launching to the observed highly structured outflows.


Physics of Plasmas | 2010

Generation of episodic magnetically driven plasma jets in a radial foil Z-pinch

Francisco Suzuki-Vidal; S. V. Lebedev; S. N. Bland; G. Hall; G. F. Swadling; A. J. Harvey-Thompson; Jeremy P. Chittenden; A. Marocchino; A. Ciardi; Adam Frank; Eric G. Blackman; S. C. Bott

We present experimental results of the formation of magnetically driven plasma jets, showing for the first time a way of producing episodic jet/ouflows in the laboratory. The jets are produced using a 6.5 μm thick aluminum disk (a radial foil), which is subjected to the 1 MA, 250 ns current pulse from the MAGPIE generator [I. H. Mitchell et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 67, 1533 (1996)]. The early time motion of the foil is characterized by the bulk motion of the mass due to the magnetic pressure, together with the formation of a surface plasma following the direction of the J×B force. A low density plasma fills the region above the foil preceding the formation of subsequent magnetically driven jets on the axis of expanding magnetic bubbles. The outflows emerge in timescales of ∼30–40 ns and their episodic nature is the result of current reconnection in the foil, aided by the formation of current-driven instabilities in the jet and the distribution of mass available from the foil. The additional inductance due ...


Physics of Plasmas | 2007

Dynamics of conical wire array z-pinch implosions.

David J. Ampleford; S. V. Lebedev; S. N. Bland; S. C. Bott; J. P. Chittenden; Christopher A. Jennings; V. L. Kantsyrev; A.S. Safronova; V. Ivanov; Dmitry A. Fedin; P.J. Laca; M.F. Yilmaz; V. Nalajala; I. Shrestha; K. Williamson; G.C. Osborne; A. Haboub; A. Ciardi

A modification of the wire array Z pinch, the conical wire array, has applications to the understanding of wire array implosions and potentially to pulse shaping relevant to inertial confinement fusion. Results are presented from imploding conical wire array experiments performed on university scale 1 MA generators—the MAGPIE generator (1 MA, 240 ns) at Imperial College London [I. H. Mitchell et al., Rev. Sci Instrum. 67, 1533 (1996)] and the Nevada Terawatt Facility’s Zebra generator (1 MA, 100 ns) at the University of Nevada, Reno [B. Bauer et al., in Dense Z-Pinches, edited by N. Pereira, J. Davis, and P. Pulsifer (AIP, New York, 1997), Vol. 409, p. 153]. This paper will discuss the implosion dynamics of conical wire arrays. Data indicate that mass ablation from the wires in this complex system can be reproduced with a rocket model with fixed ablation velocity. Modulations in the ablated plasma are present, the wavelength of which is invariant to a threefold variation in magnetic field strength. The ax...


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Supersonic Radiatively Cooled Rotating Flows and Jets in the Laboratory

David J. Ampleford; S. V. Lebedev; A. Ciardi; S. N. Bland; S. C. Bott; G. Hall; N. Naz; Christopher A. Jennings; M. Sherlock; J. P. Chittenden; J. B. A. Palmer; Adam Frank; Eric G. Blackman

The first laboratory astrophysics experiments to produce a radiatively cooled plasma jet with dynamically significant angular momentum are discussed. A new configuration of wire array z pinch, the twisted conical wire array, is used to produce convergent plasma flows each rotating about the central axis. Collision of the flows produces a standing shock and jet that each have supersonic azimuthal velocities. By varying the twist angle of the array, the rotation velocity of the system can be controlled, with jet rotation velocities reaching approximately 18% of the propagation velocity.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

Curved Herbig-Haro Jets: Simulations and Experiments

A. Ciardi; David J. Ampleford; S. V. Lebedev; C. Stehlé

Herbig-Haro jets often show some degree of curvature along their path, in many cases produced by the ram pressure of a side wind. We present simulations of both laboratory and astrophysical curved jets and results from laboratory experiments. We discuss the properties and similarities of the laboratory and astrophysical flows, which show the formation of internal shocks and working surfaces. In particular, the results illustrate how the breakup of the bow shock and clumps in the flow are produced without invoking jet variability; we also discuss how jet rotation reduces the growth of the Rayleigh-Taylor instability in curved jets.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

ON THE STRUCTURE AND STABILITY OF MAGNETIC TOWER JETS

Martin Huarte-Espinosa; Adam Frank; Eric G. Blackman; A. Ciardi; Patrick Hartigan; S. V. Lebedev; Jeremy P. Chittenden

Modern theoretical models of astrophysical jets combine accretion, rotation, and magnetic fields to launch and collimate supersonic flows from a central source. Near the source, magnetic field strengths must be large enough to collimate the jet requiring that the Poynting flux exceeds the kinetic energy flux. The extent to which the Poynting flux dominates kinetic energy flux at large distances from the engine distinguishes two classes of models. In magneto-centrifugal launch models, magnetic fields dominate only at scales 100 engine radii, after which the jets become hydrodynamically dominated (HD). By contrast, in Poynting flux dominated (PFD) magnetic tower models, the field dominates even out to much larger scales. To compare the large distance propagation differences of these two paradigms, we perform three-dimensional ideal magnetohydrodynamic adaptive mesh refinement simulations of both HD and PFD stellar jets formed via the same energy flux. We also compare how thermal energy losses and rotation of the jet base affects the stability in these jets. For the conditions described, we show that PFD and HD exhibit observationally distinguishable features: PFD jets are lighter, slower, and less stable than HD jets. Unlike HD jets, PFD jets develop current-driven instabilities that are exacerbated as cooling and rotation increase, resulting in jets that are clumpier than those in the HD limit. Our PFD jet simulations also resemble the magnetic towers that have been recently created in laboratory astrophysical jet experiments.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Interaction of a supersonic, radiatively cooled plasma jet with an ambient medium

Francisco Suzuki-Vidal; M. Bocchi; S. V. Lebedev; G. F. Swadling; G. Burdiak; S. N. Bland; P. de Grouchy; G. Hall; A. J. Harvey-Thompson; E. Khoory; S. Patankar; L. Pickworth; J. Skidmore; R. A. Smith; J. P. Chittenden; M. Krishnan; R. Madden; K. Wilson-Elliot; A. Ciardi; Adam Frank

An experimental investigation into the interaction of a supersonic, radiatively cooled plasma jet with argon gas is presented. The jet is formed by ablation of an aluminum foil driven by a 1.4 MA, 250 ns current pulse in a radial foil Z-pinch configuration. The outflow consists of a supersonic (Mach number ∼3–5), dense (ion density ni ∼ 1018 cm−3), highly collimated (half-opening angle ∼2°−5°) jet surrounded by a lower density halo plasma moving with the same axial velocity as the jet. The addition of argon above the foil leads to the formation of a shock driven by the ablation of halo plasma, together with a bow-shock driven by the dense jet. Experimental data with and without the presence of argon are compared with three-dimensional, magneto-hydrodynamic simulations using the GORGON code.


Physics of Plasmas | 2010

Bow shocks in ablated plasma streams for nested wire array z-pinches: A laboratory astrophysics testbed for radiatively cooled shocks

D. J. Ampleford; Christopher A. Jennings; G. Hall; S. V. Lebedev; S. N. Bland; S. C. Bott; F. Suzuki-Vidal; J. B. A. Palmer; J. P. Chittenden; M. E. Cuneo; Adam Frank; Eric G. Blackman; A. Ciardi

Astrophysical observations have demonstrated many examples of bow shocks, for example, the head of protostellar jets or supernova remnants passing through the interstellar medium or between discrete clumps in jets. For such systems where supersonic and super-Alfvenic flows and radiative cooling are all important, carefully scaled laboratory experiments can add insight into the physical processes involved. The early stage of a wire array z-pinch implosion consists of the steady ablation of material from fine metallic wires. Ablated material is accelerated toward the array axis by the J×B force. This flow is highly supersonic (M>5) and becomes super-Alfvenic (MA>2). Radiative cooling is significant in this flow and can be controlled by varying the material in the ablated plasma. The introduction of wires as obstructions in this steady flow leads to the formation of bow shocks, which can be used as a laboratory testbed for astrophysical bow shocks. The magnetic field associated with this obstruction wire can be controlled by varying the current through it. Differences in the shock for different cooling rates and different magnetic fields associated with the obstruction will be discussed, along with comparisons of dimensionless parameters in the experiments to astrophysical systems.Astrophysical observations have demonstrated many examples of bow shocks, for example, the head of protostellar jets or supernova remnants passing through the interstellar medium or between discrete clumps in jets. For such systems where supersonic and super-Alfvenic flows and radiative cooling are all important, carefully scaled laboratory experiments can add insight into the physical processes involved. The early stage of a wire array z-pinch implosion consists of the steady ablation of material from fine metallic wires. Ablated material is accelerated toward the array axis by the J×B force. This flow is highly supersonic (M>5) and becomes super-Alfvenic (MA>2). Radiative cooling is significant in this flow and can be controlled by varying the material in the ablated plasma. The introduction of wires as obstructions in this steady flow leads to the formation of bow shocks, which can be used as a laboratory testbed for astrophysical bow shocks. The magnetic field associated with this obstruction wire can...


IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science | 2010

Effect of Wire Diameter and Addition of an Axial Magnetic Field on the Dynamics of Radial Wire Array

Francisco Suzuki-Vidal; S. V. Lebedev; S. N. Bland; G. Hall; A. J. Harvey-Thompson; Jeremy P. Chittenden; A. Marocchino; S. C. Bott; J. B. A. Palmer; A. Ciardi

The operation of radial wire array Z-pinches driven by a 1-MA 250-ns current pulse was studied. Variation in the cathode diameter and wire diameter does not affect the overall plasma dynamics but controls the time of wire breakage and the time of pinch formation. The measured times of full wire ablation at the cathode were used to determine the ablation velocity (V abl), and the results give a scaling V abl ~ (wire diameter)-0.46. Experiments with added axial magnetic field show an increase in the pinched plasma diameter, possibly due to the compression of the axial magnetic flux by the imploding plasma.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

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Francisco Suzuki-Vidal; S. V. Lebedev; A. Ciardi; L. Pickworth; R. Rodriguez; J.M. Gil; G. Espinosa; Patrick Hartigan; G. F. Swadling; J. Skidmore; G. Hall; M. Bennett; S. N. Bland; G. Burdiak; P. de Grouchy; J. Music; L. Suttle; E. Hansen; Adam Frank

The role of radiative cooling during the evolution of a bow shock was studied in laboratory-astrophysics experiments that are scalable to bow shocks present in jets from young stellar objects. The laboratory bow shock is formed during the collision of two counter-streaming, supersonic plasma jets produced by an opposing pair of radial foil Z-pinches driven by the current pulse from the MAGPIE pulsed-power generator. The jets have different flow velocities in the laboratory frame and the experiments are driven over many times the characteristic cooling time-scale. The initially smooth bow shock rapidly develops small-scale non-uniformities over temporal and spatial scales that are consistent with a thermal instability triggered by strong radiative cooling in the shock. The growth of these perturbations eventually results in a global fragmentation of the bow shock front. The formation of a thermal instability is supported by analysis of the plasma cooling function calculated for the experimental conditions with the radiative packages ABAKO/RAPCAL.

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S. N. Bland

Imperial College London

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G. Hall

Imperial College London

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Adam Frank

University of Rochester

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G. Burdiak

Imperial College London

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