A. Marocchino
Sapienza University of Rome
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by A. Marocchino.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2007
Giovanni Lapenta; Stefano Markidis; A. Marocchino; Giorgio Kaniadakis
We simulate the acceleration of electrons to relativistic energies due to the interaction of electrons with waves generated by longitudinal (i.e., electrostatic) streaming instabilities in plasmas. Two equal systems undergoing a streaming instability evolve, one according to the classical Newtons law and one according to the special relativity dynamics equation. The system that obeys Newtons law relaxes to a Maxwellian equilibrium distribution. In the case of the relativistic dynamics, the equilibrium distribution exhibits peaks in the phase space at high momenta and a larger number of particles at high energies. This steady electron population at higher energies could explain power-law energy distribution in many plasma physics and astrophysical systems.
Physics of Plasmas | 2014
D. Batani; L. Antonelli; S. Atzeni; J. Badziak; F. Baffigi; T. Chodukowski; F. Consoli; G. Cristoforetti; R. De Angelis; R. Dudzak; G. Folpini; L. Giuffrida; L. A. Gizzi; Z. Kalinowska; P. Koester; E. Krousky; M. Krus; L. Labate; T Levato; Y. Maheut; G. Malka; D. Margarone; A. Marocchino; J. Nejdl; Ph. Nicolaï; T O'Dell; T. Pisarczyk; O. Renner; Yong-Joo Rhee; X. Ribeyre
An experiment was performed using the PALS laser to study laser-target coupling and laser-plasma interaction in an intensity regime ≤1016 W/cm2, relevant for the “shock ignition” approach to Inertial Confinement Fusion. A first beam at low intensity was used to create an extended preformed plasma, and a second one to create a strong shock. Pressures up to 90 Megabars were inferred. Our results show the importance of the details of energy transport in the overdense region.
Physics of Plasmas | 2010
Francisco Suzuki-Vidal; S. V. Lebedev; S. N. Bland; G. Hall; G. F. Swadling; A. J. Harvey-Thompson; Jeremy P. Chittenden; A. Marocchino; A. Ciardi; Adam Frank; Eric G. Blackman; S. C. Bott
We present experimental results of the formation of magnetically driven plasma jets, showing for the first time a way of producing episodic jet/ouflows in the laboratory. The jets are produced using a 6.5 μm thick aluminum disk (a radial foil), which is subjected to the 1 MA, 250 ns current pulse from the MAGPIE generator [I. H. Mitchell et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 67, 1533 (1996)]. The early time motion of the foil is characterized by the bulk motion of the mass due to the magnetic pressure, together with the formation of a surface plasma following the direction of the J×B force. A low density plasma fills the region above the foil preceding the formation of subsequent magnetically driven jets on the axis of expanding magnetic bubbles. The outflows emerge in timescales of ∼30–40 ns and their episodic nature is the result of current reconnection in the foil, aided by the formation of current-driven instabilities in the jet and the distribution of mass available from the foil. The additional inductance due ...
Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2011
S. Atzeni; A. Schiavi; A. Marocchino
Several aspects of the sensitivity of a shock-ignited inertial fusion target to variation of parameters and errors or imperfections are studied by means of one-dimensional and two-dimensional numerical simulations. The study refers to a simple all-DT target, initially proposed for fast ignition (Atzeni et al 2007 Phys. Plasmas 7 052702) and subsequently shown to be also suitable for shock ignition (Ribeyre et al 2009 Plasma Phys. Control. Fusion 51 015013). It is shown that the growth of both Richtmyer–Meshkov and Rayleigh–Taylor instability (RTI) at the ablation front is reduced by laser pulses with an adiabat-shaping picket. An operating window for the parameters of the ignition laser spike is described; the threshold power depends on beam focusing and synchronization with the compression pulse. The time window for spike launch widens with beam power, while the minimum spike energy is independent of spike power. A large parametric scan indicates good tolerance (at the level of a few percent) to target mass and laser power errors. 2D simulations indicate that the strong igniting shock wave plays an important role in reducing deceleration-phase RTI growth. Instead, the high hot-spot convergence ratio (ratio of initial target radius to hot-spot radius at ignition) makes ignition highly sensitive to target mispositioning.
Physics of Plasmas | 2013
A. Marocchino; Michail Tzoufras; S. Atzeni; A. Schiavi; Ph. Nicolaï; J. Mallet; V. T. Tikhonchuk; J. L. Feugeas
Inertial confinement fusion and specifically shock ignition involve temperatures and temperature gradients for which the classical Spitzer-Harm thermal conduction breaks down and a non-local operator is required. In this article, two non-local electron thermal conduction models are tested against kinetic Vlasov-Fokker-Planck simulations. Both models are shown to reproduce the main features of thermal heat front propagation at kinetic timescales. The reduction of the thermal conductivity as a function of the scalelength of the temperature gradient is also recovered. Comparisons at nanosecond timescales show that the models agree on the propagation velocity of the heat front, but major differences appear in the thermal precursor.
Physics of Plasmas | 2009
A. J. Harvey-Thompson; S. V. Lebedev; S. N. Bland; J. P. Chittenden; G. Hall; A. Marocchino; Francisco Suzuki-Vidal; S. C. Bott; J. B. A. Palmer; C. Ning
An inverse (exploding) wire array configuration, in which the wires form a cylinder around a current carrying electrode on axis, was used to study the ablation phase of the wires. This configuration allows the parameters of the plasma from individual wires of the array to be measured as the ablated plasma streams propagate in the outward radial direction. The density distribution and the evolution of the natural mode of modulation of the ablation flow was measured with interferometry and soft x-ray imaging. Measurements of the voltage across the array, which in this configuration is determined by the private magnetic flux around the individual wires, allow information on the localization of the current to be obtained. Results are compared to three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamics simulations.
Astrophysics and Space Science | 2009
Francisco Suzuki-Vidal; S. V. Lebedev; A. Ciardi; S. N. Bland; J. P. Chittenden; G. Hall; A. J. Harvey-Thompson; A. Marocchino; C. Ning; C. Stehlé; Adam Frank; Eric G. Blackman; S. C. Bott; T. P. Ray
We report on experiments in which magnetically driven radiatively cooled plasma jets were produced by a 1 MA, 250 ns current pulse on the MAGPIE pulsed power facility. The jets were driven by the pressure of a toroidal magnetic field in a “magnetic tower” jet configuration. This scenario is characterized by the formation of a magnetically collimated plasma jet on the axis of a magnetic “bubble”, confined by the ambient medium. The use of a radial metallic foil instead of the radial wire arrays employed in our previous work allows for the generation of episodic magnetic tower outflows which emerge periodically on timescales of ∼30 ns. The subsequent magnetic bubbles propagate with velocities reaching ∼300 km/s and interact with previous eruptions leading to the formation of shocks.
Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2013
P. Koester; L Antonelli; S. Atzeni; J. Badziak; F. Baffigi; D. Batani; C. A. Cecchetti; T. Chodukowski; F. Consoli; G. Cristoforetti; R. De Angelis; G Folpini; La Gizzi; Z. Kalinowska; E. Krousky; Milan Kucharik; L. Labate; T Levato; Richard Liska; G. Malka; Y. Maheut; A. Marocchino; Ph. Nicolaï; T O'Dell; P. Parys; T. Pisarczyk; P Raczka; O. Renner; Yong-Joo Rhee; X. Ribeyre
Shock ignition (SI) is an appealing approach in the inertial confinement scenario for the ignition and burn of a pre-compressed fusion pellet. In this scheme, a strong converging shock is launched by laser irradiation at an intensity Iλ 2 >10 15 Wc m −2 µm 2 at the end of the compression phase. In this intensity regime, laser–plasma interactions are characterized by the onset of a variety of instabilities, including stimulated Raman scattering, Brillouin scattering and the two plasmon decay, accompanied by the generation of a population of fast electrons. The effect of the fast electrons on the efficiency of the shock wave production is investigated in a series of dedicated experiments at the Prague Asterix Laser Facility (PALS). We study the laser–plasma coupling in a SI relevant regime in a planar geometry by creating an extended preformed plasma with a laser beam at ∼7 × 10 13 Wc m −2 (250 ps, 1315 nm). A strong shock is launched by irradiation with a second laser beam at intensities in the range 10 15 –10 16 Wc m −2 (250 ps, 438 nm) at various delays with respect to the first beam. The pre-plasma is characterized using x-ray spectroscopy, ion diagnostics and interferometry. Spectroscopy and calorimetry of the backscattered radiation is performed in the spectral range 250–850 nm, including (3/2)ω, ω and ω/2 emission. The fast electron production is characterized through spectroscopy and imaging of the Kα emission. Information on the shock pressure is obtained using shock breakout chronometry and measurements of the craters produced by the shock in a massive target. Preliminary results show that the backscattered energy is in the range 3–15%, mainly due to backscattered light at the laser wavelength (438 nm), which increases with increasing the delay between the two laser beams. The values of the peak shock pressures inferred from the shock breakout times are lower than expected from 2D numerical simulations. The same simulations reveal that the 2D effects play a major role in these experiments, with the laser spot size comparable with the distance between critical and ablation layers.
Physics of Plasmas | 2009
S. C. Bott; D. Haas; Y. Eshaq; Utako Ueda; F. N. Beg; D. A. Hammer; B. R. Kusse; J. B. Greenly; T. A. Shelkovenko; S. A. Pikuz; I. C. Blesener; R. D. McBride; J. D. Douglass; K. S. Bell; P. F. Knapp; J. P. Chittenden; S. V. Lebedev; S. N. Bland; G. Hall; A. Marocchino; A. Harvey-Thomson; M. G. Haines; J. B. A. Palmer; A.A. Esaulov; David J. Ampleford
The limited understanding of the mechanisms driving the mass ablation rate of cylindrical wires arrays is presently one of the major limitations in predicting array performance at the higher current levels required for inertial confinement fusion (ICF) ignition. Continued investigation of this phenomenon is crucial to realize the considerable potential for wire arrays to drive both ICF and inertial fusion energy, by enabling a predictive capability in computational modeling. We present the first study to directly compare the mass ablation rates of wire arrays as a function of the current rise rate. Formation of the precursor column is investigated on both the MAPGIE (1 MA, 250ns [Mitchell et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 67, 1533 (1996)]) and COBRA (1 MA, 100ns [Greenly et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 79, 073501 (2008)]) generators, and results are used to infer the change in the effective ablation velocity induced by the rise rate of the drive current. Laser shadowography, gated extreme ultraviolet (XUV) imaging, a...
Applied Physics Letters | 2017
R. Pompili; M. P. Anania; M. Bellaveglia; A. Biagioni; S. Bini; F. Bisesto; E. Brentegani; G. Castorina; E. Chiadroni; A. Cianchi; M. Croia; D. Di Giovenale; M. Ferrario; Francesco Filippi; A. Giribono; V. Lollo; A. Marocchino; Marco Marongiu; A. Mostacci; G. Di Pirro; S. Romeo; A. R. Rossi; J. Scifo; V. Shpakov; C. Vaccarezza; F. Villa; A. Zigler
The active plasma lens represents a compact and affordable tool with radially symmetric focusing and field gradients up to several kT/m. In order to be used as a focusing device, its effects on the particle beam distribution must be well characterized. Here, we present the experimental results obtained by focusing an high-brightness electron beam by means of a 3 cm-long discharge-capillary pre-filled with Hydrogen gas. We achieved minimum spot sizes of 24 μ m (rms) showing that, during plasma lensing, the beam emittance increases due to nonlinearities in the focusing field. The results have been cross-checked with numerical simulations, showing an excellent agreement.