Soft X-ray Spectrometer for Characterization of Electron Beam Driven WDM

POSTER

Abstract

A preliminary design study is being performed on a soft X-ray spectrometer to measure K-shell spectra emitted by a warm dense plasma generated by an intense, relativistic electron beam interacting with a thin, low-Z metal foil. A 100-ns-long electron pulse with a beam current of 1.7 kA and energy of 19.8 MeV deposits energy into the thin metal foil heating it to a warm dense plasma. The collisional ionization of the target by the electron beam produces an anisotropic angular distribution of K-shell radiation and a continuum of both scattered electrons and Bremsstrahlung up to the beam energy of 19.8 MeV. A proof-of-principle Bragg-type spectrometer has been built to measure the Ti K-$\alpha $ and K-$\beta $ lines. The goal of the spectrometer is to measure the temperature and density of this warm dense plasma for the first time with this heating technique.

Authors

  • Nicholas Ramey

    Univ of Michigan - Ann Arbor

  • Josh Coleman

    Los Alamos National Laboratory

  • John Perry

    Los Alamos National Laboratory