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Dive into the research topics where C. M. Krauland is active.

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Featured researches published by C. M. Krauland.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2006

Dual, orthogonal, backlit pinhole radiography in OMEGA experiments

C. C. Kuranz; B. E. Blue; R. P. Drake; H. F. Robey; J. F. Hansen; J. P. Knauer; M.J. Grosskopf; C. M. Krauland; D.C. Marion

Backlit pinhole radiography used with ungated film as a detector creates x-ray radiographs with increased resolution and contrast. Current hydrodynamics experiments on the OMEGA Laser use a three-dimensional sinusoidal pattern as a seed perturbation for the study of instabilities. The structure of this perturbation makes it highly desirable to obtain two simultaneous orthogonal backlighting views. We accomplished this using two backlit pinholes each mounted 12mm from the target. The pinholes, of varying size and shape, were centered on 5mm square foils of 50μm thick Ta. The backlighting is by K-alpha emission from a 500μm square Ti or Sc foil mounted 500μm from the Ta on a plastic substrate. Four laser beams overfill the metal foil, so that the expanding plastic provides radial tamping of the expanding metal plasma. The resulting x-rays pass through the target onto (ungated) direct exposure film (DEF). Interference between the two views is reduced by using a nose cone in front of the DEF, typically with a...


Physics of Plasmas | 2009

Three-dimensional blast-wave-driven Rayleigh-Taylor instability and the effects of long-wavelength modes

C. C. Kuranz; R. P. Drake; M.J. Grosskopf; A. Budde; C. M. Krauland; D.C. Marion; A. Visco; J.R. Ditmar; H. F. Robey; B. A. Remington; A. R. Miles; A. B. R. Cooper; C. Sorce; T. Plewa; Nathan Charles Hearn; K. L. Killebrew; J. P. Knauer; David Arnett; T.L. Donajkowski

This paper describes experiments exploring the three-dimensional (3D) Rayleigh–Taylor instability at a blast-wave-driven interface. This experiment is well scaled to the He/H interface during the explosion phase of SN1987A. In the experiments,  ∼5 kJ of energy from the Omega laser was used to create a planar blast wave in a plastic disk, which is accelerated into a lower-density foam. These circumstances induce the Richtmyer–Meshkov instability and, after the shock passes the interface, the system quickly becomes dominated by the Rayleigh–Taylor instability. The plastic disk has an intentional pattern machined at the plastic/foam interface. This perturbation is 3D with a basic structure of two orthogonal sine waves with a wavelength of 71 μm and an amplitude of 2.5 μm. Additional long-wavelength modes with a wavelength of either 212 or 424 μm are added onto the single-mode pattern. The addition of the long-wavelength modes was motivated by the results of previous experiments where material penetrated unex...


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

REVERSE RADIATIVE SHOCK LASER EXPERIMENTS RELEVANT TO ACCRETING STREAM-DISK IMPACT IN INTERACTING BINARIES

C. M. Krauland; R. P. Drake; C. C. Kuranz; B. Loupias; T. Plewa; Channing Huntington; D. N. Kaczala; R. Sweeney; R.P. Young; E. Falize; B. Villette; P.A. Keiter

We present the first results from high-energy-density laboratory astrophysics experiments that explore the hydrodynamic and radiative properties of a reverse shock relevant to a cataclysmic variable system. A reverse shock is a shock wave that develops when a freely flowing, supersonic plasma is impeded. In our experiments, performed on the Omega Laser Facility, a laser pulse is used to accelerate plasma ejecta into a vacuum. This flow is directed into an Al plate in front of which a shock forms in the rebounding plasma. The plasma flow is moving fast enough that it is shocked to high enough temperatures that radiative cooling affects the shock structure. These are the first experiments to produce a radiative reverse shock wave.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Experimental observations of turbulent mixing due to Kelvin–Helmholtz instability on the OMEGA Laser Facility

V. A. Smalyuk; J. F. Hansen; O. A. Hurricane; G. Langstaff; D. Martinez; H.-S. Park; K. S. Raman; B. A. Remington; H. F. Robey; O. Schilling; R. J. Wallace; Y. Elbaz; A. Shimony; Dov Shvarts; C.A. Di Stefano; R. P. Drake; D.C. Marion; C. M. Krauland; C. C. Kuranz

Shear-flow, Kelvin–Helmholtz (KH) turbulent mixing experiments were performed on the OMEGA Laser Facility [Boehly et al., Opt. Commun. 133, 495 (1997)] in which laser-driven shock waves propagated through a low-density plastic foam placed on top of a higher-density plastic foil. The plastic foil was comprised a thin iodine-doped plastic tracer layer bonded on each side to an undoped density-matched polyamide-imide plastic. Behind the shock front, lower-density foam plasma flowed over the higher-density plastic plasma, such that the interface between the foam and plastic was KH unstable. The initial perturbations consisted of pre-imposed, sinusoidal 2D perturbations, and broadband 3D perturbations due to surface roughness at the interface between the plastic and foam. KH instability growth was measured using side-on radiography with a point-projection 5-keV vanadium backlighter. Time-integrated images were captured on D-8 x-ray film. Spatial density profiles of iodine-doped plastic mixed with foam were inf...


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010

Development of a short duration backlit pinhole for radiography on the National Ignition Facility

Channing Huntington; C. M. Krauland; C. C. Kuranz; R. P. Drake; H.-S. Park; D. H. Kalantar; Brian Maddox; B. A. Remington; J. L. Kline

Experiments on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) will require bright, short duration, near-monochromatic x-ray backlighters for radiographic diagnosis of many high-energy density systems. This paper details a vanadium pinhole backlighter producing (1.8±0.5)×10(15) x-ray photons into 4π sr near the vanadium He-like characteristic x-ray energy of 5.18 keV. The x-ray yield was quantified from a set of Ross filters imaged to a calibrated image plate, with the Dante diagnostic used to confirm the quasimonochromatic nature of the spectrum produced. Additionally, an x-ray film image shows a source-limited image resolution of 26 μm from a 20 μm diameter pinhole.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Radiative reverse shock laser experiments relevant to accretion processes in cataclysmic variables

C. M. Krauland; R. P. Drake; C. C. Kuranz; R. Sweeney; M.J. Grosskopf; Robb Gillespie; P.A. Keiter; B. Loupias; E. Falize

We discuss the production of radiative reverse shocks in experiments at the Omega-60 laser facility. The ability of this high-intensity laser to impart large energy densities on micron-thin foils makes it feasible to create supersonic plasma flows. Obtaining a radiative reverse shock in the laboratory requires a sufficiently fast flow (∼100 km/s) of a material whose opacity is large enough to produce energetically significant emission from experimentally achievable shocked layers. The reverse shock forms in the flow once it is impeded. This paper presents the first radiographic data of normal incidence, reverse shockwaves. These experiments are primarily motivated by the contribution of radiative reverse shock waves to the evolving dynamics of the cataclysmic variable (CV) system in which they reside. We show similarity properties to suggest that the experimental production of radiative reserve shocks in the laboratory may be scalable to such astrophysical systems.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

An evaluation of high energy bremsstrahlung background in point-projection x-ray radiography experiments.

C. M. Krauland; L. C. Jarrott; R. P. Drake; P.A. Keiter; C. C. Kuranz; B. Westover; H. Sawada; D. N. Kaczala; P. Bonofiglo

Backlit pinhole x-ray radiography has provided high-resolution images in many recent high-energy-density laser experiments. Its aim is to image the object of interest with a roughly monochromatic Kα source. However, despite the high intrinsic brightness achieved by the technique, data on x-ray film have shown a signal to background ratio near one, with data on image plates producing a higher background. This has been attributed, without direct evidence, to the interaction of suprathermal electrons with the (high Z) pinhole substrate. We present here the first direct measurement of the hard x-rays produced by such a backlighter target and a test of an approach to reducing the background. Specifically, a thick, low-Z layer was added on the side of the substrate toward the detector, intended to stop the energetic electrons and produce smaller emissions. Results from the Omega-60 laser experiment showed that the oft-seen background signal is in the range of 60-80 keV, a plausible energy range for energetic electrons produced in the laser-irradiated plasma. It also showed a comparable level of background signal in both types of targets. The work presented here includes target design and motivating theory, as well as the unexpected findings about x-ray background production.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Three-dimensional modeling and analysis of a high energy density Kelvin-Helmholtz experiment

K. S. Raman; O. A. Hurricane; H.-S. Park; B. A. Remington; H. F. Robey; V. A. Smalyuk; R. P. Drake; C. M. Krauland; C. C. Kuranz; J. F. Hansen; E. C. Harding

A recent series of experiments on the OMEGA laser provided the first controlled demonstration of the Kelvin–Helmholtz (KH) instability in a high-energy-density physics context [E. C. Harding et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 045005, (2009); O. A. Hurricane et al., Phys. Plasmas 16, 056305, (2009)]. We present 3D simulations which resolve previously reported discrepancies between those experiments and the 2D simulation used to design them. Our new simulations reveal a three-dimensional mechanism behind the low density “bubble” structures which appeared in the experimental x-ray radiographs at late times but were completely absent in the 2D simulations. We also demonstrate that the three-dimensional expansion of the walls of the target is sufficient to explain the 20% overprediction by 2D simulation of the late-time growth of the KH rollups. The implications of these results for the design of future experiments are discussed.


Fusion Science and Technology | 2011

Target Fabrication at the University of Michigan

M.J. Grosskopf; D.C. Marion; R. P. Drake; C. C. Kuranz; F.W. Doss; A.J. Visco; Channing Huntington; C. M. Krauland; C.A. Di Stefano; E. C. Harding

Abstract At the University of Michigan (U-M), we have successfully fabricated and characterized targets for our experimental campaigns since 2003. Because of the unique production environment, we iterate many models in the course of a single-shot plan and have the flexibility to test and alter target designs as needed throughout the build process. Over the past few years, many advances in target design and fabrication have allowed greater degrees of design complexity while retaining the high level of build precision necessary for microscale experiments on facilities such as the OMEGA laser. Extensive target metrology is carried out during and after the fabrication process to allow for full knowledge of experimental conditions and to ensure that all targets are within required specifications. Analysis of the variability in metrology measurements over the multiple-shot campaigns allows for the quantification of improvements in the target build quality and metrology measurements. We present a summary of the capabilities and recent developments of target fabrication at U-M, as well as progress and analysis of build repeatability.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Measurements of the energy spectrum of electrons emanating from solid materials irradiated by a picosecond laser

C.A. Di Stefano; C. C. Kuranz; J. F. Seely; A. G. R. Thomas; R. P. Drake; P.A. Keiter; G. J. Williams; J. Park; H. Chen; M. J. MacDonald; A.M. Rasmus; Wesley Wan; N. R. Pereira; A. S. Joglekar; Andrew McKelvey; Z. Zhao; G. E. Kemp; L. C. Jarrott; C. M. Krauland; J. Peebles; B. Westover

In this work, we present the results of experiments observing the properties of the electron stream generated laterally when a laser irradiates a metal. We find that the directionality of the electrons is dependent upon their energies, with the higher-energy tail of the spectrum (∼1 MeV and higher) being more narrowly focused. This behavior is likely due to the coupling of the electrons to the electric field of the laser. The experiments are performed by using the Titan laser to irradiate a metal wire, creating the electron stream of interest. These electrons propagate to nearby spectator wires of differing metals, causing them to fluoresce at their characteristic K-shell energies. This fluorescence is recorded by a crystal spectrometer. By varying the distances between the wires, we are able to probe the divergence of the electron stream, while by varying the medium through which the electrons propagate (and hence the energy-dependence of electron attenuation), we are able to probe the energy spectrum of the stream.

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R. P. Drake

University of Michigan

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D.C. Marion

University of Michigan

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H. F. Robey

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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B. A. Remington

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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J. F. Hansen

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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J. P. Knauer

University of Rochester

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