A charged particle travelling into an increasing magnetic field will (if the field becomes strong enough) reverse direction and be reflected back, provided its velocity perpendicular to the field is sufficiently large relative to its parallel velocity. This magnetic mirror effect is a direct result of the adiabatic invariance of the magnetic moment. Plasmas can be confined by devices which utilize this effect. The mirror effect also occurs in some tokamak plasmas, since the toroidal magnetic field is stronger on the inboard side than on the outboard side; in this case it gives rise to so-called "neoclassical" behavior. The ratio of the maximum and minimum magnetic fields is known as the mirror ratio and determines the fraction of phase space that can be confined.
see: plasma physics
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