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Using machine learning to determine the temperature-dependent opacity in plasmas

ORAL

Abstract

The free-free opacity in plasmas is fundamental to our understanding of energy transport in stellar interiors and for inertial confinement fusion. However, theoretical predictions in dense plasmas are conflicting and there is a dearth of accurate experimental data for direct model validation. Here we present a novel functional exploration approach to extract the temperature-dependent absorption coefficient of a warm dense aluminium plasma for the first time. The plasma was created via isochoric heating at the XUV free-electron laser FLASH, and was probed with femtosecond time resolution showing the separate contributions to the opacity from hot electrons and ions. We find a pronounced enhancement of the opacity as the plasma electrons are heated to temperatures around the Fermi energy, with further opacity rises observed on ps timescales due to ion heating, melt, and the formation of the warm dense state.

Vinko et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 124, 225002 (2020), DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.124.225002

Presenters

  • Sam Vinko

    University of Oxford

Authors

  • Sam Vinko

    University of Oxford

  • V. Vozda

    Charles University

  • Jakob Andreasson

    ELI beamlines, ELI Beamlines, Institute of Physics of the Czech Academy of Sciences

  • Sasa Bajt

    DESY

  • Johan Bielecki

    European XFEL

  • Tomas Burian

    Czech Academic of Sciences

  • Jaromir Chalupsky

    Czech Academic of Sciences

  • Michael Paul Desjarlais

    Sandia National Laboratories

  • Holger Fleckenstein

    DESY

  • Janos Hajdu

    ELI beamlines

  • Vera Hajkova

    Czech Academic of Sciences

  • Patrick James Hollebon

    University of Oxford

  • Libor Juha

    Czech Academic of Sciences

  • Muhammad Kasim

    University of Oxford

  • Emma McBride

    SLAC

  • Kerstin Muehlig

    Uppsala University

  • Thomas Preston

    European XFEL, European XFEL GmbH

  • Sebastian Roling

    Universität Münster

  • Sven Toleikis

    DESY

  • Justin Stephen Wark

    University of Oxford

  • Helmut Zacharias

    Universität Münster