We present an experimental study of the dynamics of shocks generated by the interaction of a double-spot laser in different kinds of targets: simple aluminum foils and foam–aluminum layered targets. The experiment was performed using the Prague PALS iodine laser working at 0.44 μm wavelength and irradiance of a few 1015 W/cm2. Shock breakouts for pure Al and for foam-Al targets have been recorded using time-resolved self-emission diagnostics. Experimental results have been compared with numerical simulations. The shocks originating from two spots move forward and expand radially in the targets, finally colliding in the intermediate region and producing a very strong increase in pressure. This is particularly clear for the case of foam layered targets, where we also observed a delay of shock breakout and a spatial redistribution of the pressure. The influence of the foam layer doped with high-Z (Au) nanoparticles on the shock dynamics was also studied.
In this work, we present experimental results on the behavior of liquid water at megabar pressure. The experiment was performed using the HIPER (High-Intensity Plasma Experimental Research) laser facility, a uniaxial irradiation chamber of GEKKO XII (GXII) at the Institute of Laser Engineering (ILE), and the PHELIX at GSI (GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research), a single-beam high-power laser facility, to launch a planar shock into solid multilayered water samples. Equation-of-state data of water H 2 O are obtained in the pressure range 0.50–4.6 Mbar by tuning the laser-drive parameters. The Hugoniot parameters (pressure, density, etc.) and the shock temperature were simultaneously determined by using VISAR and SOP as diagnostic tools and quartz as the standard material for impedance mismatch experiments. Finally, our experimental results are compared with hydrodynamic simulations tested with different equations of state, showing good compatibility with tabulated SESAME tables for water.
Optical generators of strong magnetic fields based on the laser-driven-coil target (LDCT) concept are considered to be useful tools for studies of magnetized plasmas, in particular for the study of implosion of magnetized fusion targets in inertial fusion research and astrophysical applications. This paper presents results of the research directed at investigation of the plasma properties in a laser-induced magnetic field. In the experiment carried out on the kilojoule PALS laser facility, a generator of the magnetic field was a disc-coil (DC) target composed of a Cu disk coupled to a single-turn coil irradiated by a 1ω laser beam with an energy of 500 J. The attention was focused on examining the influence of the magnetic field on properties of the hot electron (HE) flux emitted from the front surface of the irradiated target. The 3-frame complex interferometry and 4-frame X-ray camera combined with the measurements of the HE population and energy using a multi-channel magnetic electron spectrometer and 2D-resolved imaging of the induced Cu Kα line emission were applied to characterize the ablative plasma and the generated particles. Based on the measured angular distributions of the electron energy spectra, 3D simulations have been performed to visualize the effect of the magnetic field on the HE flux and to provide information on space-time distribution of the electron and current density both without and with the presence of an axial magnetic field. The obtained results confirmed the possibility of generating magnetic fields above 5 T using the proposed DC target design as well as the significant impact of these fields on properties of the ablative plasma and the hot electron emission.
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