An investigation of efficient muon production for use in muon catalyzed fusion

Journal of Physics: Energy IOP Publishing 3:3 (2021) 035003-035003

Authors:

R Spencer Kelly, Lucy JF Hart, Steven J Rose

The data-driven future of high energy density physics

Nature Springer Nature 593 (2021) 351-361

Authors:

Peter Hatfield, Jim Gaffney, Gemma Anderson, Suzanne Ali, Luca Antonelli, Suzan Başeğmez du Pree, Jonathan Citrin, Marta Fajardo, Patrick Knapp, Brendan Kettle, Bogdan Kustowski, Michael MacDonald, Derek Mariscal, Madison Martin, Taisuke Nagayama, Charlotte Palmer, Jl Peterson, Steven Rose, Jj Ruby, Carl Shneider, Matt Streeter, Will Trickey, Ben Williams

Abstract:

High-energy-density physics is the field of physics concerned with studying matter at extremely high temperatures and densities. Such conditions produce highly nonlinear plasmas, in which several phenomena that can normally be treated independently of one another become strongly coupled. The study of these plasmas is important for our understanding of astrophysics, nuclear fusion and fundamental physics—however, the nonlinearities and strong couplings present in these extreme physical systems makes them very difficult to understand theoretically or to optimize experimentally. Here we argue that machine learning models and data-driven methods are in the process of reshaping our exploration of these extreme systems that have hitherto proved far too nonlinear for human researchers. From a fundamental perspective, our understanding can be improved by the way in which machine learning models can rapidly discover complex interactions in large datasets. From a practical point of view, the newest generation of extreme physics facilities can perform experiments multiple times a second (as opposed to approximately daily), thus moving away from human-based control towards automatic control based on real-time interpretation of diagnostic data and updates of the physics model. To make the most of these emerging opportunities, we suggest proposals for the community in terms of research design, training, best practice and support for synthetic diagnostics and data analysis.

Strong suppression of heat conduction in a laboratory replica of galaxy-cluster turbulent plasmas

(2021)

Authors:

J Meinecke, P Tzeferacos, JS Ross, AFA Bott, S Feister, H-S Park, AR Bell, R Blandford, RL Berger, R Bingham, A Casner, LE Chen, J Foster, DH Froula, C Goyon, D Kalantar, M Koenig, B Lahmann, C-K Li, Y Lu, CAJ Palmer, R Petrasso, H Poole, B Remington, B Reville, A Reyes, A Rigby, D Ryu, G Swadling, A Zylstra, F Miniati, S Sarkar, AA Schekochihin, DQ Lamb, G Gregori

Generating ultradense pair beams using 400 GeV/c protons

Physical Review Research American Physical Society 3 (2021) 023103

Authors:

CD Arrowsmith, N Shukla, N Charitonidis, R Boni, H Chen, T Davenne, Anthony Dyson, Dh Froula, JT Gudmundsson, Brian Huffman, Y Kadi, B Reville, S Richardson, S Sarkar, Jl Shaw, Lo Silva, P Simon, Rmgm Trines, R Bingham, G Gregori

Abstract:

An experimental scheme is presented for generating low-divergence, ultradense, relativistic, electron-positron beams using 400 GeV/c protons available at facilities such as HiRadMat and AWAKE at CERN. Preliminary Monte Carlo and particle-in-cell simulations demonstrate the possibility of generating beams containing 1013–1014 electron-positron pairs at sufficiently high densities to drive collisionless beam-plasma instabilities, which are expected to play an important role in magnetic field generation and the related radiation signatures of relativistic astrophysical phenomena. The pair beams are quasineutral, with size exceeding several skin depths in all dimensions, allowing the examination of the effect of competition between transverse and longitudinal instability modes on the growth of magnetic fields. Furthermore, the presented scheme allows for the possibility of controlling the relative density of hadrons to electron-positron pairs in the beam, making it possible to explore the parameter spaces for different astrophysical environments.

Time-resolved Measurement of Power Transfer in Plasma Amplifier Experiments on NIF

2021 Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics, CLEO 2021 - Proceedings (2021)

Authors:

PL Poole, RK Kirkwood, SC Wilks, TD Chapman, D Kalantar, M Edwards, P Michel, L DIvol, J Bude, BE Blue, KB Fournier, BM Van Wonterghem, N Fisch, P Norreys, W Rozmus

Abstract:

Beam combination via an ion wave plasma optic is discussed, including measurement of the power transfer (pump depletion and seed amplification) for several seed pulse durations and total pump energies, with accompanying simulation studies.