A TNSA Technique to Measure Light-Ion Cross Sections Using the MTW Laser
POSTER
Abstract
An experiment was performed using the Multi-Terawatt Laser (MTW) at the Laboratory for Laser Energetics (LLE) to test the feasibility of using Target Normal Sheath Acceleration (TNSA) to measure 0.1 - 10 MeV light-ion cross sections. Laser pulses (∼22 J, 7 ps) struck a 0.25 mm2 deuterated polyethylene (CD2) target, ejecting TNSA deuterons that hit a thin natural Li target film on a 25 µm thick stainless-steel substrate, causing the 7Li(d,p)8Li reaction. The phoswich scintillator, light guide, and photomultiplier tube of the Short-Lived Isotope Counting System (SLICS) were placed immediately behind the Li target, and a CAEN Digitizer was used to count the 840 ms half-life beta decay of 8Li, beginning a few milliseconds after the laser shot. The phoswich detector consisted of a fast thin and slow thick scintillator sandwiched together to allow incident particles to be identified by their different rates of energy loss. Incident deuteron energy spectra were measured using time-of-flight (TOF) to a small scintillator in front of the Li target and, for comparison, with a Thompson parabola spectrometer.
Presenters
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Andrew L Martin
Houghton College
Authors
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Andrew L Martin
Houghton College
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Noah C Harley
Houghton College
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Andrew Hotchkiss
Houghton College
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Chunsun Lei
Houghton College
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Mark E Yuly
Houghton College
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Stephen Padalino
SUNY Geneseo
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Chad J Forrest
LLE, Lab for Laser Energetics, University of Rochester, University of Rochester, Laboratory for Laser Energetics, Laboratory for Laser Energetics
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Thomas C Sangster
University of Rochester
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Sean P Regan
Laboratory for Laser Energetics, University of Rochester