Methods for extremely sparse-angle proton tomography

PHYSICAL REVIEW E American Physical Society (APS) 104:4 (2021) 45201

Authors:

Bt Spiers, R Aboushelbaya, Q Feng, Mw Mayr, I Ouatu, Rw Paddock, R Timmis, Rh-W Wang, Pa Norreys

Abstract:

Proton radiography is a widely fielded diagnostic used to measure magnetic structures in plasma. The deflection of protons with multi-MeV kinetic energy by the magnetic fields is used to infer their path-integrated field strength. Here the use of tomographic methods is proposed for the first time to lift the degeneracy inherent in these path-integrated measurements, allowing full reconstruction of spatially resolved magnetic field structures in three dimensions. Two techniques are proposed which improve the performance of tomographic reconstruction algorithms in cases with severely limited numbers of available probe beams, as is the case in laser-plasma interaction experiments where the probes are created by short, high-power laser pulse irradiation of secondary foil targets. A new configuration allowing production of more proton beams from a single short laser pulse is also presented and proposed for use in tandem with these analytical advancements.

Influences of sinusoidal density modulation on stimulated Raman scattering in inhomogeneous plasmas

Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion IOP Publishing 63:5 (2021) 055004

Authors:

Y Chen, CY Zheng, ZJ Liu, LH Cao, QS Feng, YG Chen, ZM Huang, CZ Xiao

Eigenvalue solution for the ion-collisional effects on the fast and slow ion acoustic waves in multi-ion species plasmas

Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion IOP Publishing 63:4 (2021) 045014

Authors:

ST Zhang, YZ Zhou, T Yang, R Xie, Y Jiang, SS Ban, QS Feng, YX Wang, B Qiao, ZJ Liu, LH Cao, CY Zheng

One-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations of low convergence ratio direct-drive inertial confinement fusion implosions

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences The Royal Society 379:2189 (2020) 20200224

Authors:

Robert Paddock, Heath Martin, Rusko Ruskov, Robbie Scott, Warren Garbett, Brian Haines, Alex Zylstra, Ramy Aboushelbaya, Marko Mayr, Benjamin Spiers, Robin Wang, Peter Norreys

Abstract:

Indirect drive inertial confinement fusion experiments with convergence ratios below 17 have been previously shown to be less susceptible to Rayleigh-Taylor hydrodynamic instabilities, making this regime highly interesting for fusion science. Additional limitations imposed on the implosion velocity, in-flight aspect ratio and applied laser power aim to further reduce instability growth, resulting in a new regime where performance can be well represented by one-dimensional (1D) hydrodynamic simulations. A simulation campaign was performed using the 1D radiation-hydrodynamics code HYADES to investigate the performance that could be achieved using direct drive implosions of liquid layer capsules, over a range of relevant energies. Results include potential gains of 0.19 on LMJ-scale systems and 0.75 on NIF-scale systems, and a reactor-level gain of 54 for an 8.5 MJ implosion. While the use of 1D simulations limits the accuracy of these results, they indicate a sufficiently high level of performance to warrant further investigations and verification of this new low-instability regime. This potentially suggests an attractive new approach to fusion energy.

Preparations for a European R&D roadmap for an inertial fusion demo reactor

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences The Royal Society 379 (2020) 20200005

Authors:

Peter Norreys, Luke Ceurvorst, James Sadler, Benjamin Spiers, Ramy Aboushelbaya, Marko Mayr, Robert Paddock, Naren Ratan, Alexander Savin, Kevin Glize, Raoul Trines, Bob Bingham, Matthew Hill, Nathan Sircombe, Peter Allan, Laura Hobbs, Steve James, James Skidmore, J Fyrth, J Luis, Emma Floyd, Colin Brown, Brian Haines, Re Olson, Sa Yi, Ab Zylstra, K Flippo, Pa Bradley, Rr Peterson, Jl Kline, Rj Leeper

Abstract:

A European consortium of 15 laboratories across nine nations have worked together under the EUROFusion Enabling Research grants for the past decade with three principle objectives. These are: (a) investigating obstacles to ignition on megaJoule-class laser facilities; (b) investigating novel alternative approaches to ignition, including basic studies for fast ignition (both electron and ion-driven), auxiliary heating, shock ignition, etc.; and (c) developing technologies that will be required in the future for a fusion reactor. A brief overview of these activities, presented here, along with new calculations relates the concept of auxiliary heating of inertial fusion targets, and provides possible future directions of research and development for the updated European Roadmap that is due at the end of 2020.