OMEGA, a 60-beam, 351 nm, Nd:glass laser with an on-target energy capability of more than 40 kJ, is a flexible facility that can be used for both direct- and indirect-drive targets and is designed to ultimately achieve irradiation uniformity of 1% on direct-drive capsules with shaped laser pulses (dynamic range ≳400:1). The OMEGA program for the next five years includes plasma physics experiments to investigate laser–matter interaction physics at temperatures, densities, and scale lengths approaching those of direct-drive capsules designed for the 1.8 MJ National Ignition Facility (NIF); experiments to characterize and mitigate the deleterious effects of hydrodynamic instabilities; and implosion experiments with capsules that are hydrodynamically equivalent to high-gain, direct-drive capsules. Details are presented of the OMEGA direct-drive experimental program and initial data from direct-drive implosion experiments that have achieved the highest thermonuclear yield (1014 DT neutrons) and yield efficiency (1% of scientific breakeven) ever attained in laser-fusion experiments.
Experiments with multiple laser beams have been carried out in both spherical and planar geometry to study two-plasmon-decay instability, the predominant source of suprathermal electrons in direct-drive inertial confinement fusion experiments. These electrons are observed using the hard x rays generated through electron-target interactions. The experiments show for the first time that the total overlapped intensity governs the scaling of the suprathermal-electron generation regardless of the number of overlapped beams, in contrast to conventional theories that are based on the single-beam approximation.
Time-dependent and time-integrated absorption fractions are inferred from scattered-light measurements in room-temperature and cryogenic direct-drive-implosion experiments on OMEGA. The measurements agree reasonably well with hydrodynamic simulations that include nonlocal electron-heat transport. Discrepancies in the time-resolved scattered-light spectra between simulations and experiments remain for complex laser pulse shapes, indicating beam-to-beam energy transfer and commensurate coupling losses. Time-resolved scattered-light spectra near ω∕2 and 3ω∕2 as well as time-resolved hard-x-ray measurements indicate the presence of a strongly driven two-plasmon-decay (TPD) instability at high intensities that may influence the observed laser light absorption. Experiments indicate that energetic electron production due to the TPD instability can be mitigated with high-Z-doped plastic shells.
Direct drive laser fusion ignition experiments rely on detailed understanding and control of irradiation uniformity, the Rayleigh-Taylor instability and target fabrication. The Laboratory for Laser Energetics (LLE) is investigating various theoretical aspects of a direct drive National Ignition Facility (NIF) ignition target based on an 'all-DT' design: a spherical target of ∼3.4 mm diameter, with a 1-2 µm CH wall thickness and a DT ice layer of ∼340 µm near the triple point of DT (∼19 K). OMEGA experiments are designed to address the critical issues related to direct drive laser fusion and to provide the necessary data to validate the predictive capability of LLE computer codes. The cryogenic targets to be used on OMEGA are hydrodynamically equivalent to those planned for the NIF. The current experimental studies on OMEGA address the essential components of direct drive laser fusion: irradiation uniformity and laser imprinting, Rayleigh-Taylor growth and saturation, compressed core performance and shell-fuel mixing, laser-plasma interactions and their effect on target performance, and cryogenic target fabrication and handling.
We have established the intensity limits for propagation of a frequency-doubled (2omega, 527 nm) high intensity interaction beam through an underdense large-scale-length plasma. We observe good beam transmission at laser intensities at or below 2x10(14) W/cm(2) and a strong reduction at intensities up to 10(15) W/cm(2) due to the onset of parametric scattering instabilities. We show that temporal beam smoothing by spectral dispersion allows a factor of 2 higher intensities while keeping the beam spray constant, which establishes frequency-doubled light as an option for ignition and burn in inertial confinement fusion experiments.
The radiation temperature achieved inside a hohlraum, a high-Z cylindrical cavity heated by high-power lasers, is limited by plasma filling of ablated wall material. Recent work [Dewald et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 215004 (2005)] tested radiation temperature limits in a simple on-axis laser-hohlraum geometry and validated an analytic plasma-fill model. The experiments reported here use several cones of beams to heat a 600μm diameter hohlraum. Thin-walled images show the time evolution: plasma stagnation followed by plasma filling of the hohlraum cavity. Features in the Raman backscatter spectra are correlated to the thin-walled images to measure a fill time. The quantity of hard x rays produced by hot electrons is proportional to the time left in the laser pulse after the fill time. Simulations using the radiation-hydrodynamic code LASNEX and the analytic plasma-fill model predict plasma filling consistent with the data. LASNEX predicts a much higher electron temperature than the analytic model.
A high-energy, ultraviolet Thomson scattering probe beam has been implemented on the Omega laser facility at the University of Rochester. The new probe operates at a wavelength of 264 nm, with a maximum energy of 260 J in a pulse length of 1 ns. The probe is focused with an F/6.7 lens to a minimum focal spot of 40 μm within a pointing tolerance of <50 μm. Data obtained from this probe beam have provided new diagnostic information on plasmas relevant for inertial confinement fusion and atomic physics studies.
Experiments have been performed evidencing significant stimulated Raman sidescattering (SRS) at large angles from the density gradient. This was achieved in long scale-length high-temperature plasmas in which two beams couple to the same scattered electromagnetic wave further demonstrating for the first time this multiple-beam collective SRS interaction. The collective nature of the coupling and the amplification at large angles from the density gradient increase the global SRS losses and produce light scattered in novel directions out of the planes of incidence of the beams. These findings obtained in plasmas conditions relevant of inertial confinement fusion experiments similarly apply to the more complex geometry of these experiments where anomalously large levels of SRS were measured.
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