X-ray heating of laboratory photoionized plasmas at Z
ORAL
Abstract
In separate experiments performed at the Z facility of Sandia National Laboratories two different samples were employed to produce and characterize photoionized plasmas. One was a gas cell filled with neon, and the other was a thin silicon layer coated with plastic. Both samples were driven by the broadband x-ray flux produced at the collapse of a wire array z-pinch implosion. Transmission spectroscopy of a narrowband portion of the x-ray flux was used to diagnose the charge state distribution, and the electron temperature was extracted from a Li-like ion level population ratio. To interpret the temperature measurement, we performed Boltzmann kinetics and radiation-hydrodynamic simulations. We found that non-equilibrium atomic physics and the coupling of the radiation flux to the level population kinetics play a critical role in modeling the x-ray heating of photoionized plasmas. In spite of being driven by similar x-ray drives, differences of ionization and charged state distributions in the neon and silicon plasmas are reflected in the plasma heating and observed temperatures.
–
Authors
-
R. Mancini
University of Nevada, Reno, Department of Physics, University of Nevada, Reno, NV 89557, University of Nevada, Physics Department, University of Nevada, Reno
-
T Lockard
University of Nevada, Reno
-
D Mayes
University of Nevada, Reno
-
G. Loisel
Sandia National Laboratories
-
James Bailey
Sandia National Lab, USA, Sandia National Laboratories, Sandia Natl Lab
-
Gregory Rochau
Sandia Natl Labs, Sandia National Laboratories, Sandia Natl Lab
-
J Abdallah
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
C. Fontes
Los Alamos Natl Lab, Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Duane Liedahl
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, LLNL, Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab
-
I Golovkin
Prism Computational Sciences, Prism Computational Sciences, Inc.