A standard technique in inertial confinement fusion research is the use of low levels of spectroscopic dopants as a passive diagnostic of fuel conditions. Using higher dopant levels it becomes possible to modify the plasma conditions. Doped capsule experiments may thus provide a way to control and study fundamental plasma physics processes in the inertial fusion regime. As a precursor to eventual experiments on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) we have performed a series of capsule implosions using the Omega laser. These are intended to guide the modelling of high-Z dopants and explore the feasibility of using such capsule implosions for quantitative physics experiments. We have fielded thin glass shells filled with D-He3 fuel and varying levels of Ar, Kr and Xe dopants. X-ray emission spectroscopy is combined with simultaneous measurements of primary neutron and proton yields and energy spectra in an attempt to fully constrain capsule behaviour.
CITATION STYLE
Garbett, W. J., James, S., Kyrala, G. A., Wilson, D. C., Benage, J., Wysocki, F. J., … Yaakobi, B. (2008). Constraining fundamental plasma physics processes using doped capsule implosions. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 112). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/112/2/022016
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