Performance of a hardened x-ray streak camera at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory's National Ignition Facility

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Abstract

Electron tubes continue to provide the highest speeds possible for recording dynamics of hot high-energy density plasmas. Standard streak camera drive electronics and CCD readout are not compatible with the radiation environment associated with high DT fusion yield inertial confinement fusion experiments >1013 14 MeV DT neutrons or >109 n cm-2 ns-1. We describe a hardened x-ray streak camera developed for the National Ignition Facility and present preliminary results from the first experiment on which it has participated, recording the time-resolved bremsstrahlung spectrum from the core of an inertial confinement fusion implosion at more than 40× the operational neutron yield limit of the previous National Ignition Facility x-ray streak cameras.

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Macphee, A. G., Bell, P. M., Boyle, D., Carpenter, A. C., Claus, L., Dayton, M., … Welton, A. (2022). Performance of a hardened x-ray streak camera at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s National Ignition Facility. Review of Scientific Instruments, 93(8). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0101678

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