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Chains of charged dust particles are observed aligned with a subsonic ion flow. These chains are found in dilute regions, near the midplane of a parallel-plate radio-frequency plasma under microgravity conditions. The argon ion flow speed near these chains was estimated to be of order 10(2) m/s, corresponding to an ion acoustic Mach number M<0.1. The chains were observed to be stable in both the longitudinal and transverse directions. This stability suggests that there is a transverse restoring force. The transverse components of the ion-drag force or electrostatic wake-field forces could provide such a stabilizing effect. The chain appears to terminate with a final dust particle that is located in a dilute region; this observation suggests a possible attractive force in the longitudinal direction in the presence of a subsonic ion flow.
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Recent investigations of dust-density waves in a dusty plasma under microgravity conditions [K. O. Menzel et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 235002 (2010)] showed that the wave field consists of distinct regions of different frequencies. These so-called frequency clusters are known from simulations of chains of mutually coupled van der Pol oscillators. The behavior of distinct oscillators adjacent to the cluster boundaries were studied numerically. The interaction of these oscillators leads to periodic frequency pulling, a typical feature of driven van der Pol oscillators that is also observed in our experiments.
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The penetration of a projectile into a strongly coupled dusty plasma was studied in a radio-frequency discharge under microgravity conditions. A supersonic projectile produces an elongated dust-free cavity in its wake. The dynamics of the cavity is analyzed and compared with Langevin dynamics simulations. Besides a three-dimensional Mach cone structure, the simulation shows that the cavity dynamics can be subdivided into three phases: An opening phase with fixed time scale, a closing phase, whose duration is affected by the projectile speed and, finally, a phase of particle realignment in the target cloud, which persists for a long time after the closure of the cavity.
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Density waves in a dusty plasma emerge spontaneously at low gas pressures and high dust densities. These acousticlike wave modes were studied in a radio-frequency discharge under microgravity conditions. The complex three-dimensional wave pattern shows a spatially varying wavelength that leads to bifurcations, i.e., topological defects, where wave fronts split or merge. The calculation of instantaneous wave attributes from the spatiotemporal evolution of the dust density allows a precise analysis of those structures. Investigations of the spatial frequency distribution inside the wave field revealed that the wave frequency decreases from the bulk to the edge of the cloud in terms of frequency jumps. Between those jumps, regions of almost constant frequency appear. The formation of frequency clusters is strongly correlated with defects that occur exclusively at the cluster boundaries. It is shown that the nonlinearity of the waves has a significant influence on the topology of the wave pattern.
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Self-excited density waves were studied in a strongly coupled dusty plasma of a radio-frequency discharge under microgravity conditions. The spatiotemporal evolution of the complicated three-dimensional wave field was investigated and analyzed for two different situations. The reconstructed instantaneous phase information of the wave field revealed a partial synchronization within multiple distinct domains. The boundaries of these regions coincide with the locations of topological defects.
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Self-excited dust-density waves are experimentally studied in a dusty plasma under microgravity. Two types of waves are observed: a mode inside the dust volume propagating in the direction of the ion flow and another mode propagating obliquely at the boundary between the dusty plasma and the space charge sheath. The dominance of oblique modes can be described in the frame of a fluid model. It is shown that the results fom the fluid model agree remarkably well with a kinetic electrostatic model of Rosenberg [J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 14, 631 (1996)]. In the experiment, the instability is quenched by increasing the gas pressure or decreasing the dust density. The critical pressure and dust density are well described by the models.
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This article describes a fully automated 2D-scanning Langmuir probe system for dusty plasmas under microgravity. The design combines necessary features such as random sampling, radio frequency compensation, and a compact mechanical design. The various aspects of the probe implementation and the contamination problem in the dusty plasma environment are discussed and the functionality of the system is demonstrated by measurements performed on parabolic flights.
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Self-excited dust-density waves are experimentally studied in a dusty plasma under microgravity. Two types of waves are observed: a mode inside the dust volume propagating in the direction of the ion flow and a new mode propagating obliquely at the boundary between the dusty plasma and the space-charge sheath. A model for dust-density waves propagating at an arbitrary angle with respect to the ion-flow direction is presented, which explains the preference for oblique or parallel modes as a function of ion velocity.
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Small three-dimensional strongly coupled charged particles in a spherical confinement potential arrange themselves in a nested shell structure. By means of experiments, computer simulations, and theoretical analysis, the sensitivity of their structural properties to the type of interparticle forces is explored. While the normalized shell radii are found to be independent of shielding, the shell occupation numbers are sensitive to screening and are quantitatively explained by an isotropic Yukawa model.