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Dive into the research topics where C. A. Thomas is active.

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Featured researches published by C. A. Thomas.


Physics of Plasmas | 2011

Point design targets, specifications, and requirements for the 2010 ignition campaign on the National Ignition Facility

S. W. Haan; J. D. Lindl; D. A. Callahan; D. S. Clark; J. D. Salmonson; B. A. Hammel; L. J. Atherton; R. Cook; M. J. Edwards; S. H. Glenzer; Alex V. Hamza; S. P. Hatchett; Mark Herrmann; D. E. Hinkel; D. Ho; H. Huang; O. S. Jones; J. L. Kline; G. A. Kyrala; O. L. Landen; B. J. MacGowan; M. M. Marinak; D. D. Meyerhofer; J. L. Milovich; K. A. Moreno; E. I. Moses; David H. Munro; A. Nikroo; R. E. Olson; Kyle Peterson

Point design targets have been specified for the initial ignition campaign on the National Ignition Facility [G. H. Miller, E. I. Moses, and C. R. Wuest, Opt. Eng. 443, 2841 (2004)]. The targets contain D-T fusion fuel in an ablator of either CH with Ge doping, or Be with Cu. These shells are imploded in a U or Au hohlraum with a peak radiation temperature set between 270 and 300 eV. Considerations determining the point design include laser-plasma interactions, hydrodynamic instabilities, laser operations, and target fabrication. Simulations were used to evaluate choices, and to define requirements and specifications. Simulation techniques and their experimental validation are summarized. Simulations were used to estimate the sensitivity of target performance to uncertainties and variations in experimental conditions. A formalism is described that evaluates margin for ignition, summarized in a parameter the Ignition Threshold Factor (ITF). Uncertainty and shot-to-shot variability in ITF are evaluated, and...


Physics of Plasmas | 2011

Capsule implosion optimization during the indirect-drive National Ignition Campaign

O. L. Landen; John Edwards; S. W. Haan; H. F. Robey; J. L. Milovich; B. K. Spears; S. V. Weber; D. S. Clark; J. D. Lindl; B. J. MacGowan; E. I. Moses; J. Atherton; Peter A. Amendt; T. R. Boehly; David K. Bradley; David G. Braun; D. A. Callahan; Peter M. Celliers; G. W. Collins; E. L. Dewald; L. Divol; J. A. Frenje; S. H. Glenzer; Alex V. Hamza; B. A. Hammel; D. G. Hicks; Nelson M. Hoffman; N. Izumi; O. S. Jones; J. D. Kilkenny

Capsule performance optimization campaigns will be conducted at the National Ignition Facility [G. H. Miller, E. I. Moses, and C. R. Wuest, Nucl. Fusion 44, 228 (2004)] to substantially increase the probability of ignition. The campaigns will experimentally correct for residual uncertainties in the implosion and hohlraum physics used in our radiation-hydrodynamic computational models using a variety of ignition capsule surrogates before proceeding to cryogenic-layered implosions and ignition experiments. The quantitative goals and technique options and down selections for the tuning campaigns are first explained. The computationally derived sensitivities to key laser and target parameters are compared to simple analytic models to gain further insight into the physics of the tuning techniques. The results of the validation of the tuning techniques at the OMEGA facility [J. M. Soures et al., Phys. Plasmas 3, 2108 (1996)] under scaled hohlraum and capsule conditions relevant to the ignition design are shown ...


Physics of Plasmas | 2010

National Ignition Campaign Hohlraum energetics

N. B. Meezan; L. J. Atherton; D. A. Callahan; E. L. Dewald; S. Dixit; E. G. Dzenitis; M. J. Edwards; C. A. Haynam; D. E. Hinkel; O. S. Jones; O. L. Landen; Richard A. London; P. Michel; J. D. Moody; J. L. Milovich; M. B. Schneider; C. A. Thomas; R. P. J. Town; A. Warrick; S. V. Weber; K. Widmann; S. H. Glenzer; L. J. Suter; B. J. MacGowan; J. L. Kline; George A. Kyrala; A. Nikroo

The first series of experiments of the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [E. I. Moses et al., Phys. Plasmas 16, 041006 (2009)] tested ignition Hohlraum “energetics,” a term described by four broad goals: (1) measurement of laser absorption by the Hohlraum; (2) measurement of the x-ray radiation flux (TRAD4) on the surrogate ignition capsule; (3) quantitative understanding of the laser absorption and resultant x-ray flux; and (4) determining whether initial Hohlraum performance is consistent with requirements for ignition. This paper summarizes the status of NIF Hohlraum energetics experiments. The Hohlraum targets and experimental design are described, as well as the results of the initial experiments. The data demonstrate low backscattered energy (<10%) for Hohlraums filled with helium gas. A discussion of our current understanding of NIF Hohlraum x-ray drive follows, including an overview of the computational tools, i.e., radiation-hydrodynamics codes that have been used to design the Hohlraums. The perf...


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Shock timing experiments on the National Ignition Facility: Initial results and comparison with simulation

H. F. Robey; T. R. Boehly; Peter M. Celliers; Jon H. Eggert; Damien G. Hicks; R.F. Smith; R. Collins; M. W. Bowers; K. Krauter; P. S. Datte; D. H. Munro; J. L. Milovich; O. S. Jones; P. Michel; C. A. Thomas; R.E. Olson; Stephen M. Pollaine; R. P. J. Town; S. W. Haan; D. A. Callahan; D. S. Clark; J. Edwards; J. L. Kline; S. N. Dixit; M. B. Schneider; E. L. Dewald; K. Widmann; J. D. Moody; T. Döppner; H.B. Radousky

Capsule implosions on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [Lindl et al., Phys. Plasmas 11, 339 (2004)] are underway with the goal of compressing deuterium-tritium (DT) fuel to a sufficiently high areal density (ρR) to sustain a self-propagating burn wave required for fusion power gain greater than unity. These implosions are driven with a carefully tailored sequence of four shock waves that must be timed to very high precision in order to keep the DT fuel on a low adiabat. Initial experiments to measure the strength and relative timing of these shocks have been conducted on NIF in a specially designed surrogate target platform known as the keyhole target. This target geometry and the associated diagnostics are described in detail. The initial data are presented and compared with numerical simulations. As the primary goal of these experiments is to assess and minimize the adiabat in related DT implosions, a methodology is described for quantifying the adiabat from the shock velocity measurements. Results ...


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Radiation hydrodynamics modeling of the highest compression inertial confinement fusion ignition experiment from the National Ignition Campaign

D. S. Clark; M. M. Marinak; C. R. Weber; David C. Eder; S. W. Haan; B. A. Hammel; D. E. Hinkel; O. S. Jones; J. L. Milovich; P. K. Patel; H. F. Robey; J. D. Salmonson; S. M. Sepke; C. A. Thomas

The recently completed National Ignition Campaign (NIC) on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) showed significant discrepancies between post-shot simulations of implosion performance and experimentally measured performance, particularly in thermonuclear yield. This discrepancy between simulation and observation persisted despite concerted efforts to include all of the known sources of performance degradation within a reasonable two-dimensional (2-D), and even three-dimensional (3-D), simulation model, e.g., using measured surface imperfections and radiation drives adjusted to reproduce observed implosion trajectories [Clark et al., Phys. Plasmas 20, 056318 (2013)]. Since the completion of the NIC, several effects have been identified that could explain these discrepancies and that were omitted in previous simulations. In particular, there is now clear evidence for larger than anticipated long-wavelength radiation drive asymmetries and a larger than expected perturbation seeded by the capsule support tent. This paper describes an updated suite of one-dimensional (1-D), 2-D, and 3-D simulations that include the current best understanding of these effects identified since the NIC, as applied to a specific NIC shot. The relative importance of each effect on the experimental observables is compared. In combination, these effects reduce the simulated-to-measured yield ratio from 125:1 in 1-D to 1.5:1 in 3-D, as compared to 15:1 in the best 2-D simulations published previously. While the agreement with the experimental data remains imperfect, the comparison to the data is significantly improved and suggests that the largest sources for the previous discrepancies between simulation and experiment are now being included.


Physics of Plasmas | 2011

Analysis of the National Ignition Facility Ignition Hohlraum Energetics Experiments

R. P. J. Town; M. D. Rosen; P. Michel; L. Divol; J. D. Moody; G. A. Kyrala; M. B. Schneider; J. L. Kline; C. A. Thomas; J. L. Milovich; D. A. Callahan; N. B. Meezan; D. E. Hinkel; E. A. Williams; R. L. Berger; M. J. Edwards; L. J. Suter; S. W. Haan; J. D. Lindl; E. L. Dewald; S. Dixit; S. H. Glenzer; O. L. Landen; E. I. Moses; Howard A. Scott; J. A. Harte; George B. Zimmerman

A series of 40 experiments on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [E. I. Moses et al., Phys. Plasmas 16, 041006 (2009)] to study energy balance and implosion symmetry in reduced- and full-scale ignition hohlraums was shot at energies up to 1.3 MJ. This paper reports the findings of the analysis of the ensemble of experimental data obtained that has produced an improved model for simulating ignition hohlraums. Last year the first observation in a NIF hohlraum of energy transfer between cones of beams as a function of wavelength shift between those cones was reported [P. Michel et al., Phys. Plasmas 17, 056305 (2010)]. Detailed analysis of hohlraum wall emission as measured through the laser entrance hole (LEH) has allowed the amount of energy transferred versus wavelength shift to be quantified. The change in outer beam brightness is found to be quantitatively consistent with LASNEX [G. B. Zimmerman and W. L. Kruer, Comments Plasma Phys. Controlled Fusion 2, 51 (1975)] simulations using the predicted ener...


Physics of Plasmas | 2014

High-density carbon ablator experiments on the National Ignition Facilitya)

A. J. Mackinnon; N. B. Meezan; J. S. Ross; S. Le Pape; L. Berzak Hopkins; L. Divol; D. Ho; J. Milovich; A. Pak; J. E. Ralph; T. Döppner; P. K. Patel; C. A. Thomas; R. Tommasini; S. Haan; A. G. MacPhee; J. McNaney; J. Caggiano; R. Hatarik; R. Bionta; T. Ma; B. Spears; J. R. Rygg; L. R. Benedetti; R. P. J. Town; D. K. Bradley; E. L. Dewald; D. Fittinghoff; O. S. Jones; H. R. Robey

High Density Carbon (HDC) is a leading candidate as an ablator material for Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) capsules in x-ray (indirect) drive implosions. HDC has a higher density (3.5 g/cc) than plastic (CH, 1 g/cc), which results in a thinner ablator with a larger inner radius for a given capsule scale. This leads to higher x-ray absorption and shorter laser pulses compared to equivalent CH designs. This paper will describe a series of experiments carried out to examine the feasibility of using HDC as an ablator using both gas filled hohlraums and lower density, near vacuum hohlraums. These experiments have shown that deuterium (DD) and deuterium-tritium gas filled HDC capsules driven by a hohlraum filled with 1.2 mg/cc He gas, produce neutron yields a factor of 2× higher than equivalent CH implosions, representing better than 50% Yield-over-Clean (YoC). In a near vacuum hohlraum (He = 0.03 mg/cc) with 98% laser-to-hohlraum coupling, such a DD gas-filled capsule performed near 1D expectations. A cryogenic layered implosion version was consistent with a fuel velocity = 410 ± 20 km/s with no observed ablator mixing into the hot spot.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010

The first measurements of soft x-ray flux from ignition scale Hohlraums at the National Ignition Facility using DANTE (invited).

J. L. Kline; K. Widmann; A. Warrick; R.E. Olson; C. A. Thomas; A. S. Moore; L. J. Suter; O. L. Landen; D. A. Callahan; S. Azevedo; J. Liebman; S. H. Glenzer; A. D. Conder; S. Dixit; P. Torres; V. Tran; E. L. Dewald; J. Kamperschroer; L. J. Atherton; R. Beeler; L. V. Berzins; J. Celeste; C. A. Haynam; W. W. Hsing; D. W. Larson; B. J. MacGowan; D. E. Hinkel; D. H. Kalantar; R. L. Kauffman; J. D. Kilkenny

The first 96 and 192 beam vacuum Hohlraum target experiments have been fielded at the National Ignition Facility demonstrating radiation temperatures up to 340 eV and fluxes of 20 TW/sr as viewed by DANTE representing an ∼20 times flux increase over NOVA/Omega scale Hohlraums. The vacuum Hohlraums were irradiated with 2 ns square laser pulses with energies between 150 and 635 kJ. They produced nearly Planckian spectra with about 30±10% more flux than predicted by the preshot radiation hydrodynamic simulations. To validate these results, careful verification of all component calibrations, cable deconvolution, and software analysis routines has been conducted. In addition, a half Hohlraum experiment was conducted using a single 2 ns long axial quad with an irradiance of ∼2×10(15) W/cm(2) for comparison with NIF Early Light experiments completed in 2004. We have also completed a conversion efficiency test using a 128-beam nearly uniformly illuminated gold sphere with intensities kept low (at 1×10(14) W/cm(2) over 5 ns) to avoid sensitivity to modeling uncertainties for nonlocal heat conduction and nonlinear absorption mechanisms, to compare with similar intensity, 3 ns OMEGA sphere results. The 2004 and 2009 NIF half-Hohlraums agreed to 10% in flux, but more importantly, the 2006 OMEGA Au Sphere, the 2009 NIF Au sphere, and the calculated Au conversion efficiency agree to ±5% in flux, which is estimated to be the absolute calibration accuracy of the DANTEs. Hence we conclude that the 30±10% higher than expected radiation fluxes from the 96 and 192 beam vacuum Hohlraums are attributable to differences in physics of the larger Hohlraums.


Physics of Plasmas | 2009

Energy transfer between laser beams crossing in ignition hohlraums

P. Michel; L. Divol; E. A. Williams; C. A. Thomas; D. A. Callahan; S. V. Weber; S. W. Haan; J. D. Salmonson; N. B. Meezan; O. L. Landen; S. Dixit; D. E. Hinkel; M. J. Edwards; B. J. MacGowan; J. D. Lindl; S. H. Glenzer; L. J. Suter

The full scale modeling of power transfer between laser beams crossing in plasmas is presented. A new model was developed, allowing calculations of the propagation and coupling of pairs of laser beams with their associated plasma wave in three dimensions. The complete set of laser beam smoothing techniques used in ignition experiments is modeled and their effects on crossed-beam energy transfer are investigated. A shift in wavelength between the beams can move the instability in or out of resonance and hence allows tuning of the energy transfer. The effects of energy transfer on the effective beam pointing and on symmetry have been investigated. Several ignition designs have been analyzed and compared, indicating that a wavelength shift of up to 2 A between cones of beams should be sufficient to control energy transfer in ignition experiments.


Physics of Plasmas | 2010

Multi-keV x-ray source development experiments on the National Ignition Facility

K. B. Fournier; M. J. May; Jeffrey D. Colvin; Jave O. Kane; M. B. Schneider; E. Dewald; C. A. Thomas; S. Compton; R. Marrs; J. D. Moody; E. Bond; P. Michel; J. H. Fisher; C. D. Newlander; J. F. Davis

We report results from a five shot campaign carried out with Ar–Xe gas-filled targets at the National Ignition Facility (NIF). The targets were shot with ≈350 kJ of 3ω laser energy delivered with a 5 ns trapezoidal laser pulse. We report measured x-ray output from the target in different spectral bands both below and above 1.5 keV photon energies: We find yields of ≈20.5 kJ/sr with peak x-ray power approaching 4 TW/sr over all energies, as measured for the unique viewing angle of our detector, and ≈3.6 kJ/sr with peak x-ray power of 1 TW/sr for x-rays with energies >3 keV. This is a laser-to-x-ray conversion efficiency of 13±1.3% for isotropic x-rays with energies >3 keV. Laser energy reflected by the target plasma for both inner and outer-cone beams is measured and found to be small, between 1% and 4% of the drive energy. The energy emitted in hard x-rays (with energies >25 keV) is measured and found to be ≈1 J/sr. Two-dimensional imaging of the target plasma during the laser pulse confirms a fast, volum...

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Dive into the C. A. Thomas's collaboration.

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O. L. Landen

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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N. B. Meezan

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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E. L. Dewald

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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D. A. Callahan

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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J. L. Milovich

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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O. S. Jones

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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L. Divol

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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D. E. Hinkel

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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P. Michel

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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S. W. Haan

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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