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Shock timing experiments on the National Ignition Facility: Initial results and comparison with simulation

Authors :
T. G. Parham
T. R. Boehly
A Throop
C. Choate
E. L. Dewald
Jon Eggert
Richard Town
O. S. Jones
Peter M. Celliers
B. K. Young
David C. Clark
D. D. Meyerhofer
J. D. Moody
K. G. Krauter
P. DiNicola
E. G. Dzenitis
Edward I. Moses
T. N. Malsbury
J. B. Horner
A. V. Hamza
David C. Eder
Jeremy Kroll
Harry Robey
Klaus Widmann
J. Edwards
D. M. Holunga
S. W. Haan
C. C. Widmayer
L. V. Berzins
D. H. Munro
K. A. Moreno
J. D. Sater
John Kline
Raymond F. Smith
Mark W. Bowers
P. A. Sterne
R. Collins
B. Burr
Debra Callahan
C. A. Haynam
A. Nikroo
P. Datte
B. J. MacGowan
M. J. Shaw
S. J. Brereton
D. Trummer
K. R. Coffee
J. D. Lindl
Jose Milovich
N. Masters
Harry B. Radousky
B. M. Van Wonterghem
E T Alger
Daniel H. Kalantar
Evan Mapoles
H. Chandrasekaran
Damien Hicks
C. R. Gibson
Pierre Michel
Kenneth S. Jancaitis
Marilyn Schneider
S. N. Dixit
K. N. LaFortune
J. Atherton
S. M. Pollaine
Suhas Bhandarkar
Carlos E. Castro
R. E. Olson
C. F. Walters
S. Azevedo
B. Haid
Otto Landen
James E. Fair
Cliff Thomas
Aaron Fisher
Tilo Döppner
E. M. Giraldez
Source :
Physics of Plasmas. 19:042706
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
AIP Publishing, 2012.

Abstract

Capsule implosions on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [Lindl et al., Phys. Plasmas 11, 339 (2004)] are underway with the goal of compressing deuterium-tritium (DT) fuel to a sufficiently high areal density (ρR) to sustain a self-propagating burn wave required for fusion power gain greater than unity. These implosions are driven with a carefully tailored sequence of four shock waves that must be timed to very high precision in order to keep the DT fuel on a low adiabat. Initial experiments to measure the strength and relative timing of these shocks have been conducted on NIF in a specially designed surrogate target platform known as the keyhole target. This target geometry and the associated diagnostics are described in detail. The initial data are presented and compared with numerical simulations. As the primary goal of these experiments is to assess and minimize the adiabat in related DT implosions, a methodology is described for quantifying the adiabat from the shock velocity measurements. Results are contrasted between early experiments that exhibited very poor shock timing and subsequent experiments where a modified target geometry demonstrated significant improvement.

Details

ISSN :
10897674 and 1070664X
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physics of Plasmas
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........46c277c0da96ce7c4c735aea4cb5efad
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3694122