Taylor state
In plasma physics, a Taylor state is the minimum energy state of a plasma while the plasma is conserving magnetic flux. This was first proposed by John Bryan Taylor in 1974 and he backed up this claim using data from the ZETA machine.
Taylor-States are critical to operating both the Dynomak and the reversed field pinch - both run in a Taylor State.
Examples
In 1974, Dr. John B Taylor proposed that a spheromak could be formed by inducing a magnetic flux into a loop plasma. The plasma would then relax naturally into a spheromak also known as a Taylor State. This process worked if the plasma:- Conserved the total magnetic flux
- Minimized the total energy
Derivation
Consider a closed, simply-connected, flux-conserving, perfectly conducting surface surrounding a plasma with negligible thermal energy.Since on. This implies that.
As discussed above, the plasma would relax towards a minimum energy state while conserving its magnetic helicity. Since the boundary is perfectly conducting, there cannot be any change in the associated flux. This implies and on.
We formulate a variational problem of minimizing the plasma energy while conserving magnetic helicity.
The variational problem is
After some algebra this leads to the following constraint for the minimum energy state