1,124 research outputs found

    Effects of long rarefied plasma on fast electron generation for FIREX-I targets

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    Long-scale preformed plasmas are generated inside the cone by the pre-pulse of the heating laser in the cone-guided fast ignition scheme and it is found that coupling efficiency from the heating laser to fast electrons especially suitable for core heating is drastically reduced by the preformed plasmas. To mitigate this serious problem, an extremely thin film is suggested to cover the entrance of the cone. This method, however, introduces long rarefied plasmas around the entrance of the cone and the main pulse must propagate through these plasmas. Therefore, fast electron characteristics produced by the main pulse could be affected, and effects of long rarefied plasmas on fast electron generation are investigated. It is found that the electron beam intensity becomes larger than that without the rarefied plasma, but the energy coupling rate from the heating laser to the core decreases due to lack of appropriate electrons for core heating. To achieve less than 10% degradation of the core electron temperature, the thin film must be expanded by irradiation of the pre-pulse so that the length and the density of rarefied plasmas become less than 500 ?m and one-tenth of the critical density. A thickness of the thin film can be determined by these criteria and the intensity of the pre-pulse

    Quasinormal ringing of acoustic black holes in Laval nozzles: Numerical simulations

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    Quasinormal ringing of acoustic black holes in Laval nozzles is discussed. The equation for sounds in a transonic flow is written into a Schr\"{o}dinger-type equation with a potential barrier, and the quasinormal frequencies are calculated semianalytically. From the results of numerical simulations, it is shown that the quasinormal modes are actually excited when the transonic flow is formed or slightly perturbed, as well as in the real black hole case. In an actual experiment, however, the purely-outgoing boundary condition will not be satisfied at late times due to the wave reflection at the end of the apparatus, and a late-time ringing will be expressed as a superposition of "boxed" quasinormal modes. It is shown that the late-time ringing damps more slowly than the ordinary quasinormal ringing, while its central frequency is not greatly different from that of the ordinary one. Using this fact, an efficient way for experimentally detecting the quasinormal ringing of an acoustic black hole is discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
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