Blast-wave-driven hydrodynamic instabilities are studied in the presence of a background B-field through experiments and simulations in the high-energy-density(HED)physics regime.In experiments conducted at the Labora...Blast-wave-driven hydrodynamic instabilities are studied in the presence of a background B-field through experiments and simulations in the high-energy-density(HED)physics regime.In experiments conducted at the Laboratoire pour l’utilisation des lasers intenses(LULI),a laserdriven shock-tube platform was used to generate a hydrodynamically unstable interface with a prescribed sinusoidal surface perturbation,and short-pulse x-ray radiography was used to characterize the instability growth with and without a 10-T B-field.The LULI experiments were modeled in FLASH using resistive and ideal magnetohydrodynamics(MHD),and comparing the experiments and simulations suggests that the Spitzer model implemented in FLASH is necessary and sufficient for modeling these planar systems.These results suggest insufficient amplification of the seed B-field,due to resistive diffusion,to alter the hydrodynamic behavior.Although the ideal-MHD simulations did not represent the experiments accurately,they suggest that similar HED systems with dynamic plasma-β(=2μ_(0)ρv^(2)/B^(2))values of less than∼100 can reduce the growth of blast-wave-driven Rayleigh–Taylor instabilities.These findings validate the resistive-MHD FLASH modeling that is being used to design future experiments for studying B-field effects in HED plasmas.展开更多
Laser-plasma accelerated(LPA)proton bunches are now applied for research fields ranging from ultra-high-dose-rate radiobiology to material science.Yet,the capabilities to characterize the spectrally and angularly broa...Laser-plasma accelerated(LPA)proton bunches are now applied for research fields ranging from ultra-high-dose-rate radiobiology to material science.Yet,the capabilities to characterize the spectrally and angularly broad LPA bunches lag behind the rapidly evolving applications.The OCTOPOD translates the angularly resolved spectral characterization of LPA proton bunches into the spatially resolved detection of the volumetric dose distribution deposited in a liquid scintillator.Up to 24 multi-pinhole arrays record projections of the scintillation light distribution and allow for tomographic reconstruction of the volumetric dose deposition pattern,from which proton spectra may be retrieved.Applying the OCTOPOD at a cyclotron,we show the reliable retrieval of various spatial dose deposition patterns and detector sensitivity over a broad dose range.Moreover,the OCTOPOD was installed at an LPA proton source,providing real-time data on proton acceleration performance and attesting the system optimal performance in the harsh laser-plasma environment.展开更多
文摘Blast-wave-driven hydrodynamic instabilities are studied in the presence of a background B-field through experiments and simulations in the high-energy-density(HED)physics regime.In experiments conducted at the Laboratoire pour l’utilisation des lasers intenses(LULI),a laserdriven shock-tube platform was used to generate a hydrodynamically unstable interface with a prescribed sinusoidal surface perturbation,and short-pulse x-ray radiography was used to characterize the instability growth with and without a 10-T B-field.The LULI experiments were modeled in FLASH using resistive and ideal magnetohydrodynamics(MHD),and comparing the experiments and simulations suggests that the Spitzer model implemented in FLASH is necessary and sufficient for modeling these planar systems.These results suggest insufficient amplification of the seed B-field,due to resistive diffusion,to alter the hydrodynamic behavior.Although the ideal-MHD simulations did not represent the experiments accurately,they suggest that similar HED systems with dynamic plasma-β(=2μ_(0)ρv^(2)/B^(2))values of less than∼100 can reduce the growth of blast-wave-driven Rayleigh–Taylor instabilities.These findings validate the resistive-MHD FLASH modeling that is being used to design future experiments for studying B-field effects in HED plasmas.
基金the DRACO laser team and UPTD team for excellent experiment supportpartially supported by H2020 Laserlab Europe V(PRISES,contract No.871124)+2 种基金by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme Impulse(grant agreement No.871161)the support of the Weizmann-Helmholtz Laboratory for Laser Matter Interaction(WHELMI)The experimental part of the University Proton Therapy Dresden(UPTD)facility has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program(grant agreement No.730983(INSPIRE))
文摘Laser-plasma accelerated(LPA)proton bunches are now applied for research fields ranging from ultra-high-dose-rate radiobiology to material science.Yet,the capabilities to characterize the spectrally and angularly broad LPA bunches lag behind the rapidly evolving applications.The OCTOPOD translates the angularly resolved spectral characterization of LPA proton bunches into the spatially resolved detection of the volumetric dose distribution deposited in a liquid scintillator.Up to 24 multi-pinhole arrays record projections of the scintillation light distribution and allow for tomographic reconstruction of the volumetric dose deposition pattern,from which proton spectra may be retrieved.Applying the OCTOPOD at a cyclotron,we show the reliable retrieval of various spatial dose deposition patterns and detector sensitivity over a broad dose range.Moreover,the OCTOPOD was installed at an LPA proton source,providing real-time data on proton acceleration performance and attesting the system optimal performance in the harsh laser-plasma environment.