Free-surface velocity measurements of opaque materials in laser-driven shock-wave experiments using photonic Doppler velocimetry

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Abstract

We present a novel photonic Doppler velocimetry (PDV) design for laser-driven shock-wave experiments. This PDV design is intended to provide the capability of measuring the free-surface velocity of shocked opaque materials in the terapascal range. We present measurements of the free-surface velocity of gold for as long as ∼2 ns from the shock breakout, at pressures of up to ∼7 Mbar and a free-surface velocity of 7.3 km/s with an error of ∼1.5%. Such laboratory pressure conditions are achieved predominantly at high-intensity laser facilities where the only velocity diagnostic is usually line-imaging velocity interferometry for any reflector. However, that diagnostic is limited by the lower dynamic range of the streak camera (at a temporal resolution relevant to laser shock experiments) to measure the free-surface velocity of opaque materials up to pressures of only ∼1 Mbar. We expect the proposed PDV design to allow the free-surface velocity of opaque materials to be measured at much higher pressures.

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Nissim, N., Greenberg, E., Werdiger, M., Horowitz, Y., Bakshi, L., Ferber, Y., … Eliezer, S. (2021). Free-surface velocity measurements of opaque materials in laser-driven shock-wave experiments using photonic Doppler velocimetry. Matter and Radiation at Extremes, 6(4). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0046884

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