Radiation transfer in cylindrical, toroidal and hemi-ellipsoidal plasmas

Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer Elsevier 235 (2019) 24-30

Authors:

G Pérez-Callejo, JS Wark, Steven Rose

Abstract:

We present solutions of the radiative transfer equation for cylinders, hollow hemi-ellipsoidal shells and tori for a uniform plasma of fixed geometry. The radiative transfer equation is explicitly solved for two directions of emission, parallel and perpendicular to the axis of symmetry. The ratio between the fluxes in these two directions is also calculated and its use in measuring the frequency resolved opacity of the plasma is discussed. We find that the optimal geometry to use this ratio as an opacity measurement is a planar geometry.

Radiation transfer in cylindrical, toroidal and hemi-ellipsoidal plasmas

Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer Elsevier BV (2019)

Authors:

G Pérez-Callejo, JS Wark, SJ Rose

The blind implosion-maker: Automated inertial confinement fusion experiment design

Physics of Plasmas AIP Publishing 26:6 (2019) 062706

Authors:

Peter W Hatfield, Steven Rose, R Scott

Abstract:

The design of inertial confinement fusion (ICF) experiments, alongside improving the development of energy density physics theory and experimental methods, is one of the key challenges in the quest for nuclear fusion as a viable energy source [O. A. Hurricane, J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. 717, 012005 (2016)]. Recent challenges in achieving a high-yield implosion at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) have led to new interest in considering a much wider design parameter space than normally studied [J. L. Peterson et al., Phys. Plasmas 24, 032702 (2017)]. Here, we report an algorithmic approach that can produce reasonable ICF designs with minimal assumptions. In particular, we use the genetic algorithm metaheuristic, in which “populations” of implosions are simulated, the design of the capsule is described by a “genome,” natural selection removes poor designs, high quality designs are “mated” with each other based on their yield, and designs undergo “mutations” to introduce new ideas. We show that it takes ∼5 × 104 simulations for the algorithm to find an original NIF design. We also link this method to other parts of the design process and look toward a completely automated ICF experiment design process—changing ICF from an experiment design problem to an algorithm design problem.

Laboratory study of stationary accretion shock relevant to astrophysical systems

Scientific Reports Springer Nature 9 (2019) 8157

Authors:

P Mabey, B Albertazzi, E Falize, T Michel, G Rigon, L Van Box Som, A Pelka, F-E Brack, F Kroll, E Filippov, Gianluca Gregori, Y Kuramitsu, DQ Lamb, C Li, N Ozaki, S Pikuz, Y Sakawa, Petros Tzeferacos, M Koenig

Abstract:

Accretion processes play a crucial role in a wide variety of astrophysical systems. Of particular interest are magnetic cataclysmic variables, where, plasma flow is directed along the star's magnetic field lines onto its poles. A stationary shock is formed, several hundred kilometres above the stellar surface; a distance far too small to be resolved with today's telescopes. Here, we report the results of an analogous laboratory experiment which recreates this astrophysical system. The dynamics of the laboratory system are strongly influenced by the interplay of material, thermal, magnetic and radiative effects, allowing a steady shock to form at a constant distance from a stationary obstacle. Our results demonstrate that a significant amount of plasma is ejected in the lateral direction; a phenomenon that is under-estimated in typical magnetohydrodynamic simulations and often neglected in astrophysical models. This changes the properties of the post-shock region considerably and has important implications for many astrophysical studies.

Retrieving fields from proton radiography without source profiles

(2019)

Authors:

MF Kasim, AFA Bott, P Tzeferacos, DQ Lamb, G Gregori, SM Vinko