Kalrag said:
Alright, If you had a vacuum chamber and put in a gamma ray producing material (say Radium) would it produce plasma? I have seen someone do this with microwaves, so why wouldn't it work way gamma? Heres the site that uses microwaves to produce plasma.
http://www.angelfire.com/80s/sixmhz/rfplasmasource.html
I'm going to intervene here because this thread is going in all different directions, and I'm seeing that you are being given rather strange responses.
First of all, let's correct one misconception that you have based on your original question above.
1. You cannot make a plasma in a vacuum, and certainly, you cannot make one in a perfect vacuum. A 'plasma',
by definition requires that presence of charge ions and/or electrons, so already, you need neutral gasses to be present.
2. The microwave source you gave is an example where the EM field produces electrons via field emission. These electrons then gain energy from the EM field. If the chamber where this is produced is sufficiently evacuated, but still have some neutral atoms (as is the case for may low vacuum chambers), then two things will occur: (i) the mean free path of the field electrons is sufficiently long that they will acquire quite a bit of energy from the external EM field and (ii) they can collide with the neutrals in such a way as to ionize these atoms/molecules, thus, generating a plasma.
So now, hopefully, you've understood the mechanism for such plasma generation in the reference you gave, and why asking if such a thing can be made in a "vacuum" is rather misleading and inaccurate.
The question on whether replacing microwave with gamma rays will do the same thing isn't as trivia to answer. Gamma rays have such high frequency. One has to figure out if an oscillating E field at such a rapid rate will produce (i) sufficient field-emitted electrons and (ii) produce sufficient time for the electrons to gain energy and collide with the neutrals before the field reverses direction
Note that in the microwave case, the whole chamber (or waveguide) is flooded with the EM field. Using just a "source" is no where near the same situation, and one is expected that small amount of gamma photons would collide with an atom to cause ionization. This is not a very efficient way to make a plasma (and different than the microwave case), and certainly the high the vacuum level, the less likely one would get such an ionization.
Zz.