What happens when a electron travels through the plasma?
Would it be likely that most of the electrons hit a nuclei or not?
In high school chemistry you probably learned about ideal gases. In doing so you probably imagined gas molecules as hard spherical objects that interact via direct billiard ball like collisions. This picture is
not how ions and electrons interact in a plasma.
Ions and electrons are charged and thus they interact over large distances through the Coulomb force. As an electron (or ion) travels through a plasma its trajectory is constantly being "nudged" by the combined interaction of many many many particles in a plasma. In plasma theory, we call these interactions Coulomb collisions and we can define both an effective collision frequencies and an effective mean free path. But its important to keep in mind that these interaction occur over a distance. This is fundamentally different from what occurs in gases.
What happens to an electron beam as it passes through a plasma really depends on both the plasma conditions and the beam energy. In general, a beam will slow down (transferring its energy to the plasma) but it will also decollimate (we can this velocity space diffusion). However, under certain conditions the beam can actually be accelerated by the plasma up to relativistic energies.
Can you send electron beams with different voltage, and would it matter? In a hot plasma it's difficult to rise the voltage because the resistance is so low.
The plasma potential is really set by what happens near the plasma boundary in what we call the sheath. The dynamics of the sheath depend on both the plasma conditions, but also the wall conditions.
You can drive a current through a plasma by putting electrodes on two ends of the plasma and then applying a voltage across the electrodes. This is done in many experiments. However you still have to take the sheath potential will calculating the effective potential that the plasma sees.
In a magnetically confined plasma, four types of heating are used:
There are
five methods. The fifth is alpha (or fusion product) heating. While not a major source of heating for current MFE experiments. Alpha heating is central is to idea of a sustained fusion reaction.
Its better to call the first form of heating ohmic heating, not induction. There are a number of ways to drive current in a plasma. As the current resistively decays it will heat the plasma, just like current flowing through a wire.
That's the issues I wonder of. Maybe there are other issues or aspects of this. I'm all ear.
Good for you. I encourage to to continue to wonder, but I also encourage you to start building a foundation of plasma physics.
Chen's textbook "Introduction to Plasma Physics and controlled fusion" is a good starting point. It contains introductory material on both Sheaths and Coulomb Collisions. Its designed as a textbook for an upper lever undergraduate course or an introductory graduate level course.
I also recommend Dr. Callen's personal web page:
http://homepages.cae.wisc.edu/~callen/plasmas.html
He has links to his course notes of many graduate level plasma courses. (If you're interested in Coulomb Collisions check out the 725 notes).