Jump to content

Resistive ballooning mode

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Resistive Ballooning Mode)

The resistive ballooning mode (RBM) is an instability occurring in magnetized plasmas, particularly in magnetic confinement devices such as tokamaks, when the pressure gradient is opposite to the effective gravity created by a magnetic field.

Linear growth rate

[edit]

The linear growth rate of the RBM instability is given as

where is the pressure gradient is the effective gravity produced by a non-homogeneous magnetic field, R0 is the major radius of the device, Lp is a characteristic length of the pressure gradient, and cs is the plasma sound speed.

Similarity with the Rayleigh–Taylor instability

[edit]

The RBM instability is similar to the Rayleigh–Taylor instability (RT), with Earth gravity replaced by the effective gravity , except that for the RT instability, acts on the mass density of the fluid, whereas for the RBM instability, acts on the pressure of the plasma.