Progress Toward Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities in a High-Energy-Density Plasma on the Nike Laser

POSTER

Abstract

In the realm of high-energy-density (HED) plasmas, there exist three primary hydrodynamic instabilities: Rayleigh-Taylor (RT), Richtmyer-Meshkov (RM), and Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH). Although the RT and the RM instabilities have been observed in the laboratory, no experiment to our knowledge has cleanly diagnosed the KH instability. While the RT instability results from the acceleration of a more dense fluid into a less dense fluid and the RM instability is due to shock deposited vorticity onto an interface, the KH instability is driven by a lifting force generated by velocity shear at a perturbed fluid interface. Understanding the KH instability mechanism in HED plasmas will provide essential insight into detailed RT-spike development, mass stripping, many astrophysical processes, as well as laying the groundwork for future transition to turbulence experiments. We present 2D simulations and data from our initial attempts to create a pure KH system using the Nike laser at the Naval Research Laboratory.

Authors

  • Eric Harding

    University of Michigan, U. of Michigan

  • R. Paul Drake

    University of Michigan, U. of Michigan

  • Y. Aglitskiy

    NRL Washington, DC

  • V.V. Dwarkadas

    U. of Chicago

  • R.S. Gillespie

    University of Michigan, U. of Michigan

  • M.J. Grosskopf

    University of Michigan, U. of Michigan

  • Channing Huntington

    University of Michigan, U. of Michigan

  • N. Gjeci

    University of Michigan, U. of Michigan

  • D.A. Campbell

    University of Michigan, U. of Michigan

  • D.C. Marion

    U. of Michigan