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Dive into the research topics where A. J. Mackinnon is active.

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Featured researches published by A. J. Mackinnon.


Physics of Plasmas | 1998

Hot electron production and heating by hot electrons in fast ignitor research

M.H. Key; M. D. Cable; Thomas E. Cowan; K. G. Estabrook; B. A. Hammel; S. P. Hatchett; E. A. Henry; D. E. Hinkel; J. D. Kilkenny; J. A. Koch; W. L. Kruer; A. B. Langdon; Barbara F. Lasinski; R.W. Lee; B. J. MacGowan; A. J. Mackinnon; J. D. Moody; M. J. Moran; A. A. Offenberger; Deanna M. Pennington; M. D. Perry; T. J. Phillips; Thomas C. Sangster; M. Singh; M. A. Stoyer; Max Tabak; G. L. Tietbohl; M. Tsukamoto; Kenneth Bradford Wharton; S. C. Wilks

In an experimental study of the physics of fast ignition the characteristics of the hot electron source at laser intensities up to 10(to the 20th power) Wcm{sup -2} and the heating produced at depth by hot electrons have been measured. Efficient generation of hot electrons but less than the anticipated heating have been observed.


Physics of Plasmas | 2002

Electric field detection in laser-plasma interaction experiments via the proton imaging technique

M. Borghesi; D.H. Campbell; A. Schiavi; M. G. Haines; O. Willi; A. J. Mackinnon; P. K. Patel; L. A. Gizzi; M. Galimberti; R. J. Clarke; Francesco Pegoraro; H. Ruhl; S. V. Bulanov

Due to their particular properties, the beams of the multi-MeV protons generated during the interaction of ultraintense (I>1019 W/cm2) short pulses with thin solid targets are most suited for use as a particle probe in laser-plasma experiments. The recently developed proton imaging technique employs the beams in a point-projection imaging scheme as a diagnostic tool for the detection of electric fields in laser-plasma interaction experiments. In recent investigations carried out at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (RAL, UK), a wide range of laser-plasma interaction conditions of relevance for inertial confinement fusion (ICF)/fast ignition has been explored. Among the results obtained will be discussed: the electric field distribution in laser-produced long-scale plasmas of ICF interest; the measurement of highly transient electric fields related to the generation and dynamics of hot electron currents following ultra-intense laser irradiation of targets; the observation in underdense plasmas, after the ...


Fusion Science and Technology | 2006

Fast Ion Generation by High-Intensity Laser Irradiation of Solid Targets and Applications

M. Borghesi; J. Fuchs; S. V. Bulanov; A. J. Mackinnon; P. K. Patel; Markus Roth

Abstract The acceleration of high-energy ion beams (up to several tens of mega-electron-volts per nucleon) following the interaction of short (t < 1 ps) and intense (I λ 2 > 1018 W˙cm-2˙μm-2) laser pulses with solid targets has been one of the most active areas of research in the last few years. The exceptional properties of these beams (high brightness and high spectral cutoff, high directionality and laminarity, and short burst duration) distinguish them from the lower-energy ions accelerated in earlier experiments at moderate laser intensities. In view of these properties, laser-driven ion beams can be employed in a number of groundbreaking applications in the scientific, technological, and medical areas. This paper reviews the main experimental results obtained in this area in recent years, the properties of the accelerated beams, the relevant theoretical and computational models, and the main applications that have been implemented or proposed.


Physics of Plasmas | 2011

The experimental plan for cryogenic layered target implosions on the National Ignition Facility—The inertial confinement approach to fusion

M. J. Edwards; J. D. Lindl; B. K. Spears; S. V. Weber; L. J. Atherton; D. L. Bleuel; David K. Bradley; D. A. Callahan; Charles Cerjan; D. S. Clark; G. W. Collins; J. Fair; R. J. Fortner; S. H. Glenzer; S. W. Haan; B. A. Hammel; Alex V. Hamza; S. P. Hatchett; N. Izumi; B. Jacoby; O. S. Jones; J. A. Koch; B. J. Kozioziemski; O. L. Landen; R. A. Lerche; B. J. MacGowan; A. J. Mackinnon; E. R. Mapoles; M. M. Marinak; M. J. Moran

Ignition requires precisely controlled, high convergence implosions to assemble a dense shell of deuterium-tritium (DT) fuel with ρR>∼1 g/cm2 surrounding a 10 keV hot spot with ρR ∼ 0.3 g/cm2. A working definition of ignition has been a yield of ∼1 MJ. At this yield the α-particle energy deposited in the fuel would have been ∼200 kJ, which is already ∼10 × more than the kinetic energy of a typical implosion. The National Ignition Campaign includes low yield implosions with dudded fuel layers to study and optimize the hydrodynamic assembly of the fuel in a diagnostics rich environment. The fuel is a mixture of tritium-hydrogen-deuterium (THD) with a density equivalent to DT. The fraction of D can be adjusted to control the neutron yield. Yields of ∼1014−15 14 MeV (primary) neutrons are adequate to diagnose the hot spot as well as the dense fuel properties via down scattering of the primary neutrons. X-ray imaging diagnostics can function in this low yield environment providing additional information about ...


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2001

Proton imaging: a diagnostic for inertial confinement fusion/fast ignitor studies

M. Borghesi; A. Schiavi; D.H. Campbell; M. G. Haines; O. Willi; A. J. Mackinnon; L. A. Gizzi; M. Galimberti; Robert J. Clarke; H. Ruhl

Proton imaging is a recently proposed technique for diagnosis of dense plasmas, which favourably exploits the properties of protons produced by high-intensity laser-matter interaction. The technique allows the distribution of electric fields in plasmas and around laser-irradiated targets to be explored for the first time with high temporal and spatial resolution. This leads to the possibility of investigating as yet unexplored physical issues. In particular we will present measurements of transient electric fields in laser-plasmas and around laser-irradiated targets under various interaction conditions. Complex electric field structures have been observed in long-scale laser-produced plasmas, while global target charge-up and growth of electromagnetic instabilities have been detected following ultraintense interactions with solid targets.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2004

Proton radiography as an electromagnetic field and density perturbation diagnostic (invited)

A. J. Mackinnon; P. K. Patel; R. P. J. Town; M. J. Edwards; T. G. Phillips; S. C. Lerner; D. G. Hicks; M.H. Key; S. P. Hatchett; S. C. Wilks; M. Borghesi; L. Romagnani; S. Kar; T. Toncian; Georg Pretzler; O. Willi; M. Koenig; E. Martinolli; S. Lepape; A. Benuzzi-Mounaix; P. Audebert; J. C. Gauthier; J.A. King; R. Snavely; R. R. Freeman; T. Boehlly

Laser driven proton beams have been used to diagnose transient fields and density perturbations in laser produced plasmas. Grid deflectometry techniques have been applied to proton radiography to obtain precise measurements of proton beam angles caused by electromagnetic fields in laser produced plasmas. Application of proton radiography to laser driven implosions has demonstrated that density conditions in compressed media can be diagnosed with million electron volt protons. This data has shown that proton radiography can provide unique insight into transient electromagnetic fields in super critical density plasmas and provide a density perturbation diagnostics in compressed matter.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Implosion dynamics measurements at the National Ignition Facility

Damien G. Hicks; N. B. Meezan; E. L. Dewald; A. J. Mackinnon; R.E. Olson; D. A. Callahan; T. Döppner; L. R. Benedetti; D. K. Bradley; Peter M. Celliers; D. S. Clark; P. Di Nicola; S. N. Dixit; E. G. Dzenitis; J. E. Eggert; D. R. Farley; J. A. Frenje; S. Glenn; S. H. Glenzer; Alex V. Hamza; R. F. Heeter; J. P. Holder; N. Izumi; D. H. Kalantar; S. F. Khan; J. L. Kline; J. J. Kroll; G. A. Kyrala; T. Ma; A. G. MacPhee

Measurements have been made of the in-flight dynamics of imploding capsules indirectly driven by laser energies of 1–1.7 MJ at the National Ignition Facility [Miller et al., Nucl. Fusion 44, 228 (2004)]. These experiments were part of the National Ignition Campaign [Landen et al., Phys. Plasmas 18, 051002 (2011)] to iteratively optimize the inputs required to achieve thermonuclear ignition in the laboratory. Using gated or streaked hard x-ray radiography, a suite of ablator performance parameters, including the time-resolved radius, velocity, mass, and thickness, have been determined throughout the acceleration history of surrogate gas-filled implosions. These measurements have been used to establish a dynamically consistent model of the ablative drive history and shell compressibility throughout the implosion trajectory. First results showed that the peak velocity of the original 1.3-MJ Ge-doped polymer (CH) point design using Au hohlraums reached only 75% of the required ignition velocity. Several capsu...


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

A high-resolution integrated model of the National Ignition Campaign cryogenic layered experiments

O. S. Jones; C. Cerjan; M. M. Marinak; J. L. Milovich; H. F. Robey; P. T. Springer; L. R. Benedetti; D. L. Bleuel; E. Bond; D. K. Bradley; D. A. Callahan; J. A. Caggiano; Peter M. Celliers; D. S. Clark; S. M. Dixit; T. Döppner; Rebecca Dylla-Spears; E. G. Dzentitis; D. R. Farley; S. Glenn; S. H. Glenzer; S. W. Haan; B. J. Haid; C. A. Haynam; Damien G. Hicks; B. J. Kozioziemski; K. N. LaFortune; O. L. Landen; E. R. Mapoles; A. J. Mackinnon

A detailed simulation-based model of the June 2011 National Ignition Campaign cryogenic DT experiments is presented. The model is based on integrated hohlraum-capsule simulations that utilize the best available models for the hohlraum wall, ablator, and DT equations of state and opacities. The calculated radiation drive was adjusted by changing the input laser power to match the experimentally measured shock speeds, shock merger times, peak implosion velocity, and bangtime. The crossbeam energy transfer model was tuned to match the measured time-dependent symmetry. Mid-mode mix was included by directly modeling the ablator and ice surface perturbations up to mode 60. Simulated experimental values were extracted from the simulation and compared against the experiment. Although by design the model is able to reproduce the 1D in-flight implosion parameters and low-mode asymmetries, it is not able to accurately predict the measured and inferred stagnation properties and levels of mix. In particular, the measu...


Physics of Plasmas | 2008

High-resolution 17–75keV backlighters for high energy density experiments

H.-S. Park; Brian Maddox; E. Giraldez; S. P. Hatchett; L. T. Hudson; N. Izumi; M.H. Key; S. Le Pape; A. J. Mackinnon; A. G. MacPhee; P. K. Patel; Thomas W. Phillips; B. A. Remington; J. F. Seely; R. Tommasini; R. P. J. Town; J. Workman; E. Brambrink

We have developed 17 keV to 75 keV 1-dimensional and 2-dimensional high-resolution ( 10{sup 17} W/cm{sup 2}. We have achieved high resolution point projection 1-dimensional and 2-dimensional radiography using micro-foil and micro-wire targets attached to low-Z substrate materials. The micro-wire size was 10 {micro}m x 10 {micro}m x 300 {micro}m on a 300 {micro}m x 300 {micro}m x 5 {micro}m CH substrate. The radiography performance was demonstrated using the Titan laser at LLNL. We observed that the resolution is dominated by the micro-wire target size and there is very little degradation from the plasma plume, implying that the high energy x-ray photons are generated mostly within the micro-wire volume. We also observe that there are enough K{alpha} photons created with a 300 J, 1-{omega}, 40 ps pulse laser from these small volume targets, and that the signal-to-noise ratio is sufficiently high, for single shot radiography experiments. This unique technique will be used on future high energy density (HED) experiments at the new Omega-EP, ZR and NIF facilities.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Neutron spectrometry--an essential tool for diagnosing implosions at the National Ignition Facility (invited).

M. Gatu Johnson; J. A. Frenje; D. T. Casey; C. K. Li; F. H. Séguin; R. D. Petrasso; R. C. Ashabranner; R. Bionta; D. L. Bleuel; E. Bond; J. A. Caggiano; A. Carpenter; C. Cerjan; T. J. Clancy; T. Doeppner; M. J. Eckart; M. J. Edwards; S. Friedrich; S. H. Glenzer; S. W. Haan; Edward P. Hartouni; R. Hatarik; S. P. Hatchett; O. S. Jones; G. A. Kyrala; S. Le Pape; R. A. Lerche; O. L. Landen; T. Ma; A. J. Mackinnon

DT neutron yield (Y(n)), ion temperature (T(i)), and down-scatter ratio (dsr) determined from measured neutron spectra are essential metrics for diagnosing the performance of inertial confinement fusion (ICF) implosions at the National Ignition Facility (NIF). A suite of neutron-time-of-flight (nTOF) spectrometers and a magnetic recoil spectrometer (MRS) have been implemented in different locations around the NIF target chamber, providing good implosion coverage and the complementarity required for reliable measurements of Y(n), T(i), and dsr. From the measured dsr value, an areal density (ρR) is determined through the relationship ρR(tot) (g∕cm(2)) = (20.4 ± 0.6) × dsr(10-12 MeV). The proportionality constant is determined considering implosion geometry, neutron attenuation, and energy range used for the dsr measurement. To ensure high accuracy in the measurements, a series of commissioning experiments using exploding pushers have been used for in situ calibration of the as-built spectrometers, which are now performing to the required accuracy. Recent data obtained with the MRS and nTOFs indicate that the implosion performance of cryogenically layered DT implosions, characterized by the experimental ignition threshold factor (ITFx), which is a function of dsr (or fuel ρR) and Y(n), has improved almost two orders of magnitude since the first shot in September, 2010.

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P. K. Patel

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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M.H. Key

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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T. Ma

University of California

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O. L. Landen

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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A. G. MacPhee

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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F. N. Beg

University of California

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N. B. Meezan

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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S. P. Hatchett

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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S. Le Pape

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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