1,467 research outputs found
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An Improved Charged Particle Model in CALEICF
Modeling ICF capsules and test problems involving thermonuclear plasmas requires modeling the charged particles produced by the thermonuclear reactions. The charged particles escaping from an ICF capsule are one of the main diagnostics of capsule performance. Caleicf can locally deposit the charged particle energy into the electron and ion fields instantaneously or track them using a Monte Carlo algorithm. Test problems revealed that Caleicf's charged particle package needed improvement. The package has been enhanced to include the thermal energy of the reacting particles and to model the created particles energy distribution. The thermal energy of the reacting particles is accounted for as described in Ballabio, et al. [Ballabio et al., 1998] and Warshaw [Warshaw, 2001] . This energy is removed from the background ion energy and distributed between the created particles. The particle energy distributions are modeled with an approximation used by Ballabio, et al. This distribution is a modified Gaussian (based on the square root of the energy) that has a functional form similar to the exact distribution (see Warshaw). The skewness of the distribution matches that of the exact distribution within 1-2%. The thermal energy and the parameters of the distribution can be calculated using ({sigma}{nu}) and its first two derivatives with respect to temperature. The new model will be compared with the original one for several test problems and ICF calculations
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The Use of Nuclear Explosives To Disrupt or Divert Asteroids
Nuclear explosives are a mature technology with well-characterized effects. Proposed utilizations include a near asteroid burst to ablate surface material and nudge the body to a safer orbit, or a direct sub-surface burst to fragment the body. For this latter method, previous estimates suggest that for times as short as 1000 days, over 99.999% of the material is diverted, and no longer impacts the Earth, a huge mitigation factor. To better understand these possibilities, we have used a multidimensional radiation/hydrodynamics code to simulate sub-surface and above surface bursts on an inhomogeneous, 1 km diameter body with an average density of 2 g/cc. The body, or fragments (up to 750,000) are then tracked along 4 representative orbits to determine the level of mitigation achieved. While our code has been well tested in simulations on terrestrial structures, the greatest uncertainty in these results lies in the input. These results, particularly the effort to nudge a body into a different orbit, are dependant on NEO material properties, like the dissipation of unconsolidated material in a low gravity environment, as well as the details on an individual body's structure. This problem exists in simulating the effect of any mitigation technology. In addition to providing an greater understanding of the results of applying nuclear explosives to NEO-like bodies, these simulations suggest what must be learned about these bodies to improve the predictive capabilities. Finally, we will comment on some of the popular misinformation abounding about the utility of nuclear explosives
Supernova hydrodynamics experiments on Nova
We are developing experiments using the Nova laser to investigate (1) compressible nonlinear hydrodynamic mixing relevant to the first few hours of the supernova (SN) explosion and (2) ejecta-ambient plasma interactions relevant to the early SN remnant phase. The experiments and astrophysical implications are discussed. We discuss additional experiments possible with ultra-high-intensity lasers. © 1998 American Institute of Physics.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87451/2/551_1.pd
Gravitational Radiation from Rotational Instabilities in Compact Stellar Cores with Stiff Equations of State
We carry out 3-D numerical simulations of the dynamical instability in
rapidly rotating stars initially modeled as polytropes with n = 1.5, 1.0, and
0.5. The calculations are done with a SPH code using Newtonian gravity, and the
gravitational radiation is calculated in the quadrupole limit. All models
develop the global m=2 bar mode, with mass and angular momentum being shed from
the ends of the bar in two trailing spiral arms. The models then undergo
successive episodes of core recontraction and spiral arm ejection, with the
number of these episodes increasing as n decreases: this results in
longer-lived gravitational wave signals for stiffer models. This instability
may operate in a stellar core that has expended its nuclear fuel and is
prevented from further collapse due to centrifugal forces. The actual values of
the gravitational radiation amplitudes and frequencies depend sensitively on
the radius of the star R_{eq} at which the instability develops.Comment: 39 pages, uses Latex 2.09. To be published in the Dec. 15, 1996 issue
of Physical Review D. 21 figures (bitmapped). Originals available in
compressed Postscript format at ftp://zonker.drexel.edu/papers/bars
Gravitational Waves from Gravitational Collapse
Gravitational wave emission from the gravitational collapse of massive stars
has been studied for more than three decades. Current state of the art
numerical investigations of collapse include those that use progenitors with
realistic angular momentum profiles, properly treat microphysics issues,
account for general relativity, and examine non--axisymmetric effects in three
dimensions. Such simulations predict that gravitational waves from various
phenomena associated with gravitational collapse could be detectable with
advanced ground--based and future space--based interferometric observatories.Comment: 68 pages including 13 figures; revised version accepted for
publication in Living Reviews in Relativity (http://www.livingreviews.org
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Vacuum Insulator Development for the Dielectric Wall Accelerator
At Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, we are developing a new type of accelerator, known as a Dielectric Wall Accelerator, in which compact pulse forming lines directly apply an accelerating field to the beam through an insulating vacuum boundary. The electrical strength of this insulator may define the maximum gradient achievable in these machines. To increase the system gradient, we are using 'High Gradient Insulators' composed of alternating layers of dielectric and metal for the vacuum insulator. In this paper, we present our recent results from experiment and simulation, including the first test of a High Gradient Insulator in a functioning Dielectric Wall Accelerator cell
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High-power laser source evaluation
This document reports progress in these areas: EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS FROM NOVA: TAMPED XENON UNDERDENSE X-RAY EMITTERS; MODELING MULTI-KEV RADIATION PRODUCTION OF XENON-FILLED BERYLLIUM CANS; MAPPING A CALCULATION FROM LASNEX TO CALE; HOT X RAYS FROM SEEDED NIF CAPSULES; HOHLRAUM DEBRIS MEASUREMENTS AT NOVA; FOAM AND STRUCTURAL RESPONSE CALCULATIONS FOR NIF NEUTRON EXPOSURE SAMPLE CASE ASSEMBLY DESIGN; NON-IGNITION X-RAY SOURCE FLUENCE-AREA PRODUCTS FOR NUCLEAR EFFECTS TESTING ON NIF. Also appended are reprints of two papers. The first is on the subject of ``X-Ray Production in Laser-Heated Xe Gas Targets.`` The second is on ``Efficient Production and Applications of 2- to 10-keV X Rays by Laser-Heated Underdense Radiators.`
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