C. H. Wilde
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by C. H. Wilde.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014
Petr L. Volegov; C. R. Danly; D. N. Fittinghoff; G. P. Grim; N. Guler; N. Izumi; T. Ma; F. E. Merrill; A. L. Warrick; C. H. Wilde; D. C. Wilson
The neutron imaging system at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) is an important diagnostic tool for measuring the two-dimensional size and shape of the neutrons produced in the burning deuterium-tritium plasma during the ignition stage of inertial confinement fusion (ICF) implosions at NIF. Since the neutron source is small (∼100 μm) and neutrons are deeply penetrating (>3 cm) in all materials, the apertures used to achieve the desired 10-μm resolution are 20-cm long, single-sided tapers in gold. These apertures, which have triangular cross sections, produce distortions in the image, and the extended nature of the pinhole results in a non-stationary or spatially varying point spread function across the pinhole field of view. In this work, we have used iterative Maximum Likelihood techniques to remove the non-stationary distortions introduced by the aperture to reconstruct the underlying neutron source distributions. We present the detailed algorithms used for these reconstructions, the stopping criteria used and reconstructed sources from data collected at NIF with a discussion of the neutron imaging performance in light of other diagnostics.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008
Mark D. Wilke; S. H. Batha; P. A. Bradley; Robert D. Day; David D. Clark; Valerie E. Fatherley; Joshua P. Finch; R. Gallegos; Felix P. Garcia; Gary P. Grim; Steven A. Jaramillo; Andrew J. Montoya; Michael J. Moran; George L. Morgan; John A. Oertel; Thomas A. Ortiz; J. R. Payton; Peter Pazuchanics; D. W. Schmidt; Adelaida C. Valdez; C. H. Wilde; D. C. Wilson
The National Ignition Facility (NIF) is scheduled to begin deuterium-tritium (DT) shots possibly in the next several years. One of the important diagnostics in understanding capsule behavior and to guide changes in Hohlraum illumination, capsule design, and geometry will be neutron imaging of both the primary 14 MeV neutrons and the lower-energy downscattered neutrons in the 6-13 MeV range. The neutron imaging system (NIS) described here, which we are currently building for use on NIF, uses a precisely aligned set of apertures near the target to form the neutron images on a segmented scintillator. The images are recorded on a gated, intensified charge coupled device. Although the aperture set may be as close as 20 cm to the target, the imaging camera system will be located at a distance of 28 m from the target. At 28 m the camera system is outside the NIF building. Because of the distance and shielding, the imager will be able to obtain images with little background noise. The imager will be capable of imaging downscattered neutrons from failed capsules with yields Y(n)>10(14) neutrons. The shielding will also permit the NIS to function at neutron yields >10(18), which is in contrast to most other diagnostics that may not work at high neutron yields. The following describes the current NIF NIS design and compares the predicted performance with the NIF specifications that must be satisfied to generate images that can be interpreted to understand results of a particular shot. The current design, including the aperture, scintillator, camera system, and reconstruction methods, is briefly described. System modeling of the existing Omega NIS and comparison with the Omega data that guided the NIF design based on our Omega results is described. We will show NIS model calculations of the expected NIF images based on component evaluations at Omega. We will also compare the calculated NIF input images with those unfolded from the NIS images generated from our NIS numerical modeling code.
Physics of Plasmas | 2015
D. A. Callahan; O. A. Hurricane; D. E. Hinkel; T. Döppner; T. Ma; H.-S. Park; M. A. Barrios Garcia; L. Berzak Hopkins; D. T. Casey; C. Cerjan; E. L. Dewald; T. R. Dittrich; M. J. Edwards; S. W. Haan; Alex V. Hamza; J. L. Kline; J. P. Knauer; A. L. Kritcher; O. L. Landen; S. LePape; A. G. MacPhee; J. L. Milovich; A. Nikroo; A. Pak; P. K. Patel; J. R. Rygg; J. E. Ralph; J. D. Salmonson; B. K. Spears; P. T. Springer
By increasing the velocity in “high foot” implosions [Dittrich et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 055002 (2014); Park et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 055001 (2014); Hurricane et al., Nature 506, 343 (2014); Hurricane et al., Phys. Plasmas 21, 056314 (2014)] on the National Ignition Facility laser, we have nearly doubled the neutron yield and the hotspot pressure as compared to the implosions reported upon last year. The implosion velocity has been increased using a combination of the laser (higher power and energy), the hohlraum (depleted uranium wall material with higher opacity and lower specific heat than gold hohlraums), and the capsule (thinner capsules with less mass). We find that the neutron yield from these experiments scales systematically with a velocity-like parameter of the square root of the laser energy divided by the ablator mass. By connecting this parameter with the inferred implosion velocity ( v), we find that for shots with primary yield >1 × 1015 neutrons, the total yield ∼ v9.4. This incre...
Physics of Plasmas | 2013
D. Jung; Katerina Falk; N. Guler; O. Deppert; M. Devlin; Andrea Favalli; Juan C. Fernandez; D. C. Gautier; Matthias Geissel; R. Haight; Christopher E. Hamilton; B. M. Hegelich; R. P. Johnson; F. E. Merrill; G. Schaumann; Kurt F. Schoenberg; M. Schollmeier; T. Shimada; T.N. Taddeucci; J. L. Tybo; S.A. Wender; C. H. Wilde; G. A. Wurden; Markus Roth
We present a full characterization of a short pulse laser-driven neutron source. Neutrons are produced by nuclear reactions of laser-driven ions deposited in a secondary target. The emission of neutrons is a superposition of an isotropic component into 4π and a forward directed, jet-like contribution, with energies ranging up to 80 MeV. A maximum flux of 4.4 × 109 neutrons/sr has been observed and used for fast neutron radiography. On-shot characterization of the ion driver and neutron beam has been done with a variety of different diagnostics, including particle detectors, nuclear reaction, and time-of-flight methods. The results are of great value for future optimization of this novel technique and implementation in advanced applications.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2016
N. Guler; Petr L. Volegov; Andrea Favalli; F. E. Merrill; Katerina Falk; D. Jung; J. L. Tybo; C. H. Wilde; Stephen Croft; C. R. Danly; O. Deppert; M. Devlin; Juan C. Fernandez; D. C. Gautier; Matthias Geissel; R. Haight; Christopher E. Hamilton; B. M. Hegelich; Daniela Henzlova; R. P. Johnson; G. Schaumann; Kurt F. Schoenberg; M. Schollmeier; Tsutomu Shimada; Martyn T. Swinhoe; T.N. Taddeucci; S.A. Wender; G. A. Wurden; Markus Roth
Emerging approaches to short-pulse laser-driven neutron production offer a possible gateway to compact, low cost, and intense broad spectrum sources for a wide variety of applications. They are based on energetic ions, driven by an intense short-pulse laser, interacting with a converter material to produce neutrons via breakup and nuclear reactions. Recent experiments performed with the high-contrast laser at the Trident laser facility of Los Alamos National Laboratory have demonstrated a laser-driven ion acceleration mechanism operating in the regime of relativistic transparency, featuring a volumetric laser-plasma interaction. This mechanism is distinct from previously studied ones that accelerate ions at the laser-target surface. The Trident experiments produced an intense beam of deuterons with an energy distribution extending above 100 MeV. This deuteron beam, when directed at a beryllium converter, produces a forward-directed neutron beam with ∼5 × 109 n/sr, in a single laser shot, primarily due to ...
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010
E. N. Loomis; Gary P. Grim; C. H. Wilde; D. C. Wilson; G. L. Morgan; Mark D. Wilke; I.L. Tregillis; F. E. Merrill; Deborah J. Clark; J. Finch; D. N. Fittinghoff; Dan E. Bower
Development of analysis techniques for neutron imaging at the National Ignition Facility is an important and difficult task for the detailed understanding of high-neutron yield inertial confinement fusion implosions. Once developed, these methods must provide accurate images of the hot and cold fuels so that information about the implosion, such as symmetry and areal density, can be extracted. One method under development involves the numerical inversion of the pinhole image using knowledge of neutron transport through the pinhole aperture from Monte Carlo simulations. In this article we present results of source reconstructions based on simulated images that test the methods effectiveness with regard to pinhole misalignment.
Physics of Plasmas | 2017
T. Ma; P. K. Patel; N. Izumi; P. T. Springer; M.H. Key; L. J. Atherton; M. A. Barrios; L. R. Benedetti; R. Bionta; E. Bond; D. K. Bradley; J. A. Caggiano; D. A. Callahan; D. T. Casey; Peter M. Celliers; C. Cerjan; J. A. Church; D. S. Clark; E. L. Dewald; T. R. Dittrich; S. Dixit; T. Döppner; Rebecca Dylla-Spears; D. H. Edgell; R. Epstein; J. E. Field; D. N. Fittinghoff; J. A. Frenje; M. Gatu Johnson; S. Glenn
Hydrodynamic mix of the ablator into the DT fuel layer and hot spot can be a critical performance limitation in inertial confinement fusion implosions. This mix results in increased radiation loss, cooling of the hot spot, and reduced neutron yield. To quantify the level of mix, we have developed a simple model that infers the level of contamination using the ratio of the measured x-ray emission to the neutron yield. The principal source for the performance limitation of the “low-foot” class of implosions appears to have been mix. Lower convergence “high-foot” implosions are found to be less susceptible to mix, allowing velocities of >380 km/s to be achieved.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Matthias Prall; Marco Durante; Thomas Berger; Bartos Przybyla; Christian Graeff; Phillipp M. Lang; Ciara LaTessa; Less Shestov; Palma Simoniello; C. R. Danly; F. G. Mariam; F. E. Merrill; Paul Nedrow; C. H. Wilde; Dmitry Varentsov
The charged particle community is looking for techniques exploiting proton interactions instead of X-ray absorption for creating images of human tissue. Due to multiple Coulomb scattering inside the measured object it has shown to be highly non-trivial to achieve sufficient spatial resolution. We present imaging of biological tissue with a proton microscope. This device relies on magnetic optics, distinguishing it from most published proton imaging methods. For these methods reducing the data acquisition time to a clinically acceptable level has turned out to be challenging. In a proton microscope, data acquisition and processing are much simpler. This device even allows imaging in real time. The primary medical application will be image guidance in proton radiosurgery. Proton images demonstrating the potential for this application are presented. Tomographic reconstructions are included to raise awareness of the possibility of high-resolution proton tomography using magneto-optics.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012
N. Guler; Petr L. Volegov; C. R. Danly; G. P. Grim; F. E. Merrill; C. H. Wilde
Inertial confinement fusion experiments at the National Ignition Facility are designed to understand the basic principles of creating self-sustaining fusion reactions by laser driven compression of deuterium-tritium (DT) filled cryogenic plastic capsules. The neutron imaging diagnostic provides information on the distribution of the central fusion reaction region and the surrounding DT fuel by observing neutron images in two different energy bands for primary (13-17 MeV) and down-scattered (6-12 MeV) neutrons. From this, the final shape and size of the compressed capsule can be estimated and the symmetry of the compression can be inferred. These experiments provide small sources with high yield neutron flux. An aperture design that includes an array of pinholes and penumbral apertures has provided the opportunity to image the same source with two different techniques. This allows for an evaluation of these different aperture designs and reconstruction algorithms.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012
F. E. Merrill; Robert A. Buckles; Deborah J. Clark; C. R. Danly; Owen B. Drury; J M Dzenitis; V E Fatherly; D. N. Fittinghoff; R. Gallegos; Gary P. Grim; N. Guler; E. N. Loomis; S Lutz; Robert M. Malone; D D Martinson; D Mares; D J Morley; George L. Morgan; John A. Oertel; I.L. Tregillis; Petr L. Volegov; P B Weiss; C. H. Wilde; D. C. Wilson
A neutron imaging diagnostic has recently been commissioned at the National Ignition Facility (NIF). This new system is an important diagnostic tool for inertial fusion studies at the NIF for measuring the size and shape of the burning DT plasma during the ignition stage of Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) implosions. The imaging technique utilizes a pinhole neutron aperture, placed between the neutron source and a neutron detector. The detection system measures the two dimensional distribution of neutrons passing through the pinhole. This diagnostic has been designed to collect two images at two times. The long flight path for this diagnostic, 28 m, results in a chromatic separation of the neutrons, allowing the independently timed images to measure the source distribution for two neutron energies. Typically the first image measures the distribution of the 14 MeV neutrons and the second image of the 6-12 MeV neutrons. The combination of these two images has provided data on the size and shape of the burning plasma within the compressed capsule, as well as a measure of the quantity and spatial distribution of the cold fuel surrounding this core.A neutron imaging diagnostic has recently been commissioned at the National Ignition Facility (NIF). This new system is an important diagnostic tool for inertial fusion studies at the NIF for measuring the size and shape of the burning DT plasma during the ignition stage of Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) implosions. The imaging technique utilizes a pinhole neutron aperture, placed between the neutron source and a neutron detector. The detection system measures the two dimensional distribution of neutrons passing through the pinhole. This diagnostic has been designed to collect two images at two times. The long flight path for this diagnostic, 28 m, results in a chromatic separation of the neutrons, allowing the independently timed images to measure the source distribution for two neutron energies. Typically the first image measures the distribution of the 14 MeV neutrons and the second image of the 6-12 MeV neutrons. The combination of these two images has provided data on the size and shape of the burning plasma within the compressed capsule, as well as a measure of the quantity and spatial distribution of the cold fuel surrounding this core.