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  • Electric Explosion of a Sur...
    Aleksandrov, V. V.; Branitsky, A. V.; Grabovski, E. V.; Gribov, A. N.; Gritsuk, A. N.; Korolev, V. D.; Laukhin, Ya. N.; Mitrofanov, K. N.; Oleinik, G. M.; Predkova, E. I.; Samokhin, A. A.; Smirnov, V. P.; Frolov, I. N.; Shishlov, A. O.

    Plasma physics reports, 06/2020, Volume: 46, Issue: 6
    Journal Article

    — The formation of plasma on the surface of a current-carrying electrode of a high-current facility when a current flows through it with a linear density of up to 4 MA/cm and is coated with lead foil or ceramic is studied. The propagation velocity of a dense plasma from a stainless steel electrode is 2–10 km/s, and when the electrode is coated with lead, it is 1–6 km/s. In these experiments, there is no load typical for such facilities—a source of intense X-ray radiation. The plasma propagation from ceramic-coated electrodes starts 200 ns later than that for metal electrodes.