233 research outputs found
Three-dimensional fast electron transport for ignition-scale inertial fusion capsules
Three-dimensional hybrid PIC simulations are presented to study electron
energy transport and deposition in a full-scale fast ignition configuration.
Multi-prong core heating close to ignition is found when a few GA, few PW beam
is injected. Resistive beam filamentation in the corona seeds the 3D current
pattern that penetrates the core. Ohmic heating is important in the low-density
corona, while classical Coulomb deposition heats the core. Here highest energy
densities (few Tbar at 10 keV) are observed at densities above 200 g/cc. Energy
coupling to the core ranges from 20 to 30%; it is enhanced by beam collimation
and decreases when raising the beam particle energy from 1.5 to 5.5 MeV.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
On collisional free-free photon absorption in warm dense matter
The rate of photon absorption in warm dense matter (WDM) induced by free-free
electron-ion collisions is derived from Sommerfeld's cross-section for
non-relativistic bremsstrahlung emission, making use of detailed balance
relations. Warm dense matter is treated as a metal-like state in the
approximation of a uniform degenerate electron gas and a uniform ion
background. Total absorption rates are averaged over the electron Fermi
distribution. A closed expression is obtained for the absorption rate,
depending on temperature, density, and photon energy, that scales with ion
charge Z. It is evaluated numerically for the full parameter space, which
requires different representations of the hypergeometric functions involved.
The results are valid for photon frequencies larger than the plasma frequency
of the medium. They are compared with approximate formulas in various
asymptotic regions
The reflectivity of relativistic ultra-thin electron layers
The coherent reflectivity of a dense, relativistic, ultra-thin electron layer
is derived analytically for an obliquely incident probe beam. Results are
obtained by two-fold Lorentz transformation. For the analytical treatment, a
plane uniform electron layer is considered. All electrons move with uniform
velocity under an angle to the normal direction of the plane; such electron
motion corresponds to laser acceleration by direct action of the laser fields,
as it is described in a companion paper. Electron density is chosen high enough
to ensure that many electrons reside in a volume \lambda_R^3, where \lambda_R
is the wavelength of the reflected light in the rest frame of the layer. Under
these conditions, the probe light is back-scattered coherently and is directed
close to the layer normal rather than the direction of electron velocity. An
important consequence is that the Doppler shift is governed by
\gamma_x=(1-(V_x/c)^2)^{-1/2} derived from the electron velocity component V_x
in normal direction rather than the full \gamma-factor of the layer electrons.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, submitted to the special issue "Fundamental
Physics with Ultra-High Fields" in The European Physical Journal
Fast ignition of fusion targets by laser-driven electrons
We present hybrid PIC simulations of fast electron transport and energy
deposition in pre-compressed fusion targets, taking full account of collective
magnetic effects and the hydrodynamic response of the background plasma.
Results on actual ignition of an imploded fast ignition configuration are shown
accounting for the increased beam divergence found in recent experiments [J.S.
Green et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 015003 (2008)] and the reduction of the
electron kinetic energy due to profile steepening predicted by advanced PIC
simulations [B. Chrisman et al. Phys. Plasmas 15, 056309 (2008)]. Target
ignition is studied as a function of injected electron energy, distance of
cone-tip to dense core, initial divergence and kinetic energy of the
relativistic electron beam. We found that beam collimation reduces
substantially the ignition energies of the cone-guided fuel configuration
assumed here.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures. accepted for publication in Plasma Physics and
Controlled Fusio
Dense attosecond electron sheets from laser wakefields using an up-ramp density transition
Controlled electron injection into a laser-driven wakefield at a well defined space and time is reported based on particle-in-cell simulations. Key novel ingredients are an underdense plasma target with an up-ramp density profile followed by a plateau and a fairly large laser focus diameter that leads to an essentially one-dimensional (1D) regime of laser wakefield, which is different from the bubble (complete blowout) regime occurring for tightly focused drive beams. The up-ramp profile causes 1D wave breaking to occur sharply at the up-ramp-plateau transition. As a result, it generates an ultrathin (few nanometer, corresponding to attosecond duration), strongly overdense relativistic electron sheet that is injected and accelerated in the wakefield. A peaked electron energy spectrum and high charge (âŒnC) distinguish the final sheet
Design considerations for table-top, laser-based VUV and X-ray free electron lasers
A recent breakthrough in laser-plasma accelerators, based upon ultrashort
high-intensity lasers, demonstrated the generation of quasi-monoenergetic
GeV-electrons. With future Petawatt lasers ultra-high beam currents of ~100 kA
in ~10 fs can be expected, allowing for drastic reduction in the undulator
length of free-electron-lasers (FELs). We present a discussion of the key
aspects of a table-top FEL design, including energy loss and chirps induced by
space-charge and wakefields. These effects become important for an optimized
table-top FEL operation. A first proof-of-principle VUV case is considered as
well as a table-top X-ray-FEL which may open a brilliant light source also for
new ways in clinical diagnostics.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in Appl. Phys.
Foundations of self-consistent particle-rotor models and of self-consistent cranking models
The Kerman-Klein formulation of the equations of motion for a nuclear shell
model and its associated variational principle are reviewed briefly. It is then
applied to the derivation of the self-consistent particle-rotor model and of
the self-consistent cranking model, for both axially symmetric and triaxial
nuclei. Two derivations of the particle-rotor model are given. One of these is
of a form that lends itself to an expansion of the result in powers of the
ratio of single-particle angular momentum to collective angular momentum, that
is essentual to reach the cranking limit. The derivation also requires a
distinct, angular-momentum violating, step. The structure of the result implies
the possibility of tilted-axis cranking for the axial case and full
three-dimensional cranking for the triaxial one. The final equations remain
number conserving. In an appendix, the Kerman-Klein method is developed in more
detail, and the outlines of several algorithms for obtaining solutions of the
associated non-linear formalism are suggested.Comment: 29 page
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