Shock Structure and Radiative Cooling Effects on Reverse Shock Experiments at MAGPIE
POSTER
Abstract
Despite similar upstream flow velocities and mass densities, we observe striking variations in the reverse shock structure depending on the wire material used. Specifically, when aluminium wire arrays are employed, we observe a well-defined, sharp shock that aligns with magneto-hydrodynamic theory. However, in the case of tungsten wires, we do not observe a distinct stand-off shock; instead, we observe a broad region characterized by density fluctuations spanning a wide range of spatial scales.
These two contrasting interactions are diagnosed by using interferometry, Thomson scattering, shadowgraphy, and a newly developed imaging refractometer [3]. The refractometer enables to characterise the small-scale density perturbations by detecting subtle deflections of the probing laser. Our findings suggest that the differences in shock structure are most likely due to radiative cooling instabilities which give rise to density perturbations elongated along magnetic field lines. In aluminium plasma, these instabilities grow more slowly and are mitigated by thermal conduction.
[1] J. H. Hunter, Jr., “Generalized Thermal Stability and its Application to the Interstellar Gas”, ApJ, (1970).
[2] F. Suzuki-Vidal, et. al. “Bow Shock Fragmentation Driven by a Thermal Instability in Laboratory Astrophysics Experiments”, ApJ, (2015).
[3] Hare, J. D. et. al. “An Imaging Refractometer for Density Fluctuation Measurements in High Energy Density Plasmas”, RSI, (2020).
[4] S. Merlini, J. D. Hare, G. C. Burdiak, et. al. "Radiative Cooling Effects on Reverse Shocks Formed by Magnetised Supersonic Plasma Flows", AIP PoP, (2023) [arXiv preprint].
Publication: S. Merlini, J. D. Hare, G. C. Burdiak, et. al. "Radiative Cooling Effects on Reverse Shocks Formed by Magnetised Supersonic Plasma Flows", AIP PoP, (2023) [arXiv preprint]
Presenters
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Stefano Merlini
Imperial College London
Authors
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Stefano Merlini
Imperial College London
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Jack D Hare
MIT PSFC
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Guy C Burdiak
First Light Fusion Ltd
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Jack W Halliday
University of Oxford, Imperial College London
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Andrea Ciardi
Sorbonne Université, Observatoire de Paris
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Jeremy P Chittenden
Imperial College London
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Aidan C Crilly
Imperial College London
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Katherine Marrow
Imperial College London
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Danny Russell
Technische Universitaet Muenchen, Technical University of Munich
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Lee G Suttle
Imperial College London, Imperial College
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E. R Tubman
Imperial College London, Imperial College, Imperial College London, London, UK
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Vicente Valenzuela-Villaseca
Princeton University
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Thomas Varnish
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT
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Sergey V Lebedev
Imperial College London