13 research outputs found
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Recent implosion experiments at Nova
Both electron (direct) and x-ray (indirect) driven implosions of DT targets have been done using approx.20 kJ of 0.35 ..mu..m light from the ten beam Nova laser facility. The direct drive targets (glass microballoons with nominal dimensions of 1000 ..mu..m x 2 ..mu..m and DT pressures of 12 to 14 atm) produced neutron yields in excess of 10/sup 13/ and fusion efficiencies >0.15%. Recent experiments will be described, with particular emphasis on measurements made using neutron diagnostics
Laser plasma diagnostics of dense plasmas
The authors describe several experiments on Nova that use laser-produced plasmas to generate x-rays capable of backlighting dense, cold plasmas (p {approximately} 1--3 gm/cm{sup 3}, kT {approximately} 5--10 eV, and areal density {rho}{ell}{approximately} 0.01--0.05 g/cm{sup 2}). The x-rays used vary over a wide range of h{nu}, from 80 eV (X-ray laser) to 9 keV. This allows probing of plasmas relevant to many hydrodynamic experiments. Typical diagnostics are 100 ps pinhole framing cameras for a long pulse backlighter and a time-integrated CCD camera for a short pulse backlighter
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Numerical Analysis of Spherically Convergent Rayleigh-Taylor Experiments
In the frame of a CEA/US DOE collaboration, radiation driven spherically convergent experiments were performed on the Nova laser in order m measure the Rayleigh-Taylor growth at the ablation front. Numerical simulations using the 2D Lagrangian code FCI2 have correctly reproduced experiments in moderate convergent geometry. [C. Cherfils et al., PRL 83, 5507 (1999)]. Experiments have addressed convergence ratios up to 4 by considering larger capsules, larger hohlraum and longer laser pulses [S.G. Glendinning et al., to be published in Physics of Plasmas]. Numerical analysis of these high convergence implosions is presented, and the effect of convergence on the Rayleigh-Taylor growth is investigated
Underdense radiation sources: Moving towards longer wavelengths
Underdense radiation sources have been developed to
provide efficient laboratory multi-keV radiation sources for radiography and
radiation hardening studies. In these plasmas laser absorption by inverse
bremsstrahlung leads to high x-ray conversion efficiency because of
efficient ionization of the low density aerogel or gas targets. Now we
performing experiments in the soft x-ray energy regime where the atomic
physics models are much more complicated. In recent experiments at the NIKE
laser, we have irradiated a Ti-doped SiO aerogel with up to 1650 J of
248 nm wavelength light. The absolute Ti L-shell emission in the 200-800 eV
range is measured with a diagnostic that uses a transmission grating coupled
to Si photodiodes. We will give an overview of the temporally-resolved
absolutely calibrated spectra obtained over a range of conditions.
Eventually we hope to extend our studies to x-ray production in the EUV
range
Progress towards materials science above 1000 GPa (10 Mbar) on the NIF laser
Solid state dynamics experiments at extreme pressures, P > 1000 GPa (10 Mbar), and ultrahigh strain rates (106–108 s−1) are being developed for the National Ignition Facility (NIF) laser. These experiments will open up exploration of new regimes of materials science at an order of magnitude higher pressures than have been possible to date. Such extreme, solid state conditions can be accessed with a ramped pressure drive. The experimental, computational, and theoretical techniques are being developed and tested on the Omega laser. Constitutive models for solid state strength under these conditions are tested by comparing simulations with experiments measuring perturbation growth from the Rayleigh–Taylor instability in solid state samples of vanadium. Radiography techniques using synchronized bursts of x-rays have been developed to diagnose this perturbation growth. Velocity interferometer measurements (VISAR) establish the high pressure conditions generated by the ramped drive. Experiments on Omega measuring dynamic material strength at peak pressures of ~1 Mbar will be discussed. The time resolved observation of foil cracking and void formation show the need for tamped samples and a planar drive
Extreme ultraviolet probing of laser imprint in a thin foil using an x-ray laser backlighter
For direct drive inertial confinement fusion, a capsule is imploded by directly illuminating the surface with laser light. Beam smoothing and uniformity of illumination affect the seeding of instabilities at the ablation front. We have developed a technique for studying the imprint of a laser beam on a thin foil using an x-ray laser as an extreme ultraviolet (XUV) backlighter. We use multilayer XUV optics to relay the x-ray laser onto the directly driven foil, and then to image the foil modulation onto a charged coupled device camera. This technique allows us to measure small fractional variations in the foil thickness. We have measured the modulation due to imprint from a low intensity 0.35 mu m drive beam incident on a 3 mu m Si foil using an yttrium x-ray laser on Nova. We present results from a similar technique to measure the imprinted modulation due to a low intensity 0.53 mu m drive beam incident on a 2 mu m Al foil using a germanium x-ray laser at the Vulcan facility. (C) 1997 American Institute of Physics
Mass distribution of hydrodynamic jets produced on the national ignition facility
The production of supersonic jets of material via the interaction of a strong shock wave with a spatially localized density perturbation is a common feature of inertial confinement fusion and astrophysics. The spatial structure and mass evolution of supersonic jets has previously been investigated in detail [J. M. Foster et. al, Phys. Plasmas 9, 2251 (2002) and B. E. Blue et. al, Phys. Plasmas 12, 056312 (2005)]. In this paper, the results from the first series of hydrodynamic experiments will be presented in which the mass distribution within the jet was quantified. In these experiments, two of the first four beams of NIF are used to drive a 40 Mbar shock wave into millimeter scale aluminum targets backed by 100 mg/cc carbon aerogel foam. The remaining beams are delayed in time and are used to provide a point-projection x-ray backlighter source for diagnosing the structure of the jet. Comparisons between data and simulations using several codes are presented