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Dive into the research topics where Carl J. Pawley is active.

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Featured researches published by Carl J. Pawley.


Physics of Plasmas | 1996

The Nike KrF laser facility: Performance and initial target experiments

S. P. Obenschain; Stephen E. Bodner; Denis G. Colombant; K. A. Gerber; R. H. Lehmberg; E. A. McLean; A. N. Mostovych; Mark S. Pronko; Carl J. Pawley; Andrew J. Schmitt; J. D. Sethian; V. Serlin; J. A. Stamper; C. A. Sullivan; Jill P. Dahlburg; John H. Gardner; Y.-L. Chan; A. V. Deniz; J. Hardgrove; Thomas Lehecka; M. Klapisch

Krypton‐fluoride (KrF) lasers are of interest to laser fusion because they have both the large bandwidth capability (≳THz) desired for rapid beam smoothing and the short laser wavelength (1/4 μm) needed for good laser–target coupling. Nike is a recently completed 56‐beam KrF laser and target facility at the Naval Research Laboratory. Because of its bandwidth of 1 THz FWHM (full width at half‐maximum), Nike produces more uniform focal distributions than any other high‐energy ultraviolet laser. Nike was designed to study the hydrodynamic instability of ablatively accelerated planar targets. First results show that Nike has spatially uniform ablation pressures (Δp/p<2%). Targets have been accelerated for distances sufficient to study hydrodynamic instability while maintaining good planarity. In this review we present the performance of the Nike laser in producing uniform illumination, and its performance in correspondingly uniform acceleration of targets.


Physics of Plasmas | 1999

Observation of Rayleigh-Taylor Growth to Short Wavelengths on Nike

Carl J. Pawley; Stephen E. Bodner; Jill P. Dahlburg; S. P. Obenschain; Andrew J. Schmitt; J. D. Sethian; C. A. Sullivan; John H. Gardner; Y. Aglitskiy; Y.-L. Chan; Thomas Lehecka

The uniform and smooth focal profile of the Nike KrF laser [S. Obenschain et al., Phys. Plasmas 3, 2098 (1996)] was used to ablatively accelerate 40 μm thick polystyrene planar targets with pulse shaping to minimize shock heating of the compressed material. The foils had imposed small-amplitude sinusoidal wave perturbations of 60, 30, 20, and 12.5 μm wavelength. The shortest wavelength is near the ablative stabilization cutoff for Rayleigh–Taylor growth. Modification of the saturated wave structure due to random laser imprint was observed. Excellent agreement was found between the two-dimensional simulations and experimental data for most cases where the laser imprint was not dominant.


Physics of Plasmas | 1998

Computational modeling of direct-drive fusion pellets and KrF-driven foil experiments

John H. Gardner; Andrew J. Schmitt; Jill P. Dahlburg; Carl J. Pawley; Stephen E. Bodner; Stephen P. Obenschain; V. Serlin; Y. Aglitskiy

FAST is a radiation transport hydrodynamics code that simulates laser matter interactions of relevance to direct-drive laser fusion target design. FAST solves the Euler equations of compressible flow using the Flux-Corrected Transport finite volume method. The advection algorithm provides accurate computation of flows from nearly incompressible vortical flows to those that are highly compressible and dominated by strong pressure and density gradients. In this paper we describe the numerical techniques and physics packages. FAST has also been benchmarked with Nike laser facility experiments in which linearly perturbed, low adiabat planar plastic targets are ablatively accelerated to velocities approaching 107 cm/s. Over a range of perturbation wavelengths, the code results agree with the measured Rayleigh–Taylor growth from the linear through the deeply nonlinear regimes. FAST has been applied to the two-dimensional spherical simulation design to provide surface finish and laser bandwidth tolerances for a ...


Physics of Plasmas | 1997

Measurements of laser-imprinted perturbations and Rayleigh–Taylor growth with the Nike KrF laser

Carl J. Pawley; K. A. Gerber; R. H. Lehmberg; E. A. McLean; A. N. Mostovych; S. P. Obenschain; J. D. Sethian; V. Serlin; J. A. Stamper; C. A. Sullivan; Stephen E. Bodner; Denis G. Colombant; Jill P. Dahlburg; Andrew J. Schmitt; John H. Gardner; C. M. Brown; John F. Seely; Thomas Lehecka; Y. Aglitskiy; A. V. Deniz; Y.-L. Chan; Nathan Metzler; M. Klapisch

Nike is a 56 beam Krypton Fluoride (KrF) laser system using Induced Spatial Incoherence (ISI) beam smoothing with a measured focal nonuniformity 〈ΔI/I〉 of 1% rms in a single beam [S. Obenschain et al., Phys. Plasmas 3, 1996 (2098)]. When 37 of these beams are overlapped on the target, we estimate that the beam nonuniformity is reduced by 37, to (ΔI/I)≅0.15% (excluding short-wavelength beam-to-beam interference). The extraordinary uniformity of the laser drive, along with a newly developed x-ray framing diagnostic, has provided a unique facility for the accurate measurements of Rayleigh–Taylor amplified laser-imprinted mass perturbations under conditions relevant to direct-drive laser fusion. Data from targets with smooth surfaces as well as those with impressed sine wave perturbations agree with our two-dimensional (2-D) radiation hydrodynamics code that includes the time-dependent ISI beam modulations. A 2-D simulation of a target with a 100 A rms randomly rough surface finish driven by a completely unif...


Physics of Plasmas | 2002

Direct observation of mass oscillations due to ablative Richtmyer–Meshkov instability and feedout in planar plastic targets

Y. Aglitskiy; A.L. Velikovich; Max Karasik; V. Serlin; Carl J. Pawley; Andrew J. Schmitt; S. P. Obenschain; A. N. Mostovych; John H. Gardner; Nathan Metzler

Perturbations that seed Rayleigh–Taylor (RT) instability in laser-driven targets form during the early-time period. This time includes a shock wave transit from the front to the rear surface of the target, and a rarefaction wave transit in the opposite direction. During this time interval, areal mass perturbations caused by all sources of nonuniformity (laser imprint, surface ripple) are expected to oscillate. The first direct experimental observations of the areal mass oscillations due to ablative Richtmyer–Meshkov (RM) instability and feedout followed by the RT growth of areal mass modulation are discussed. The experiments were made with 40–99 μm thick planar plastic targets rippled either on the front or on the rear with a sine wave ripple with either 30 or 45 μm wavelength and with 0.5, 1, or 1.5 μm amplitude. Targets were irradiated with 4 ns long Nike KrF laser pulses at ∼50 TW/cm2. The oscillations were observed with our novel diagnostic technique, a monochromatic x-ray imager coupled to a streak c...


Review of Scientific Instruments | 1997

Large area electron beam pumped krypton fluoride laser amplifier

J. D. Sethian; S. P. Obenschain; K. A. Gerber; Carl J. Pawley; V. Serlin; C. A. Sullivan; W. Webster; A. V. Deniz; Thomas Lehecka; M. W. McGeoch; R. A. Altes; P. A. Corcoran; I. D. Smith; O. C. Barr

Nike is a recently completed multi-kilojoule krypton fluoride (KrF) laser that has been built to study the physics of direct drive inertial confinement fusion. This paper describes in detail both the pulsed power and optical performance of the largest amplifier in the Nike laser, the 60 cm amplifier. This is a double pass, double sided, electron beam-pumped system that amplifies the laser beam from an input of 50 J to an output of up to 5 kJ. It has an optical aperture of 60 cm × 60 cm and a gain length of 200 cm. The two electron beams are 60 cm high × 200 cm wide, have a voltage of 640 kV, a current of 540 kA, and a flat top power pulse duration of 250 ns. A 2 kG magnetic field is used to guide the beams and prevent self-pinching. Each electron beam is produced by its own Marx/pulse forming line system. The amplifier has been fully integrated into the Nike system and is used on a daily basis for laser-target experiments.


Physics of Plasmas | 2002

Effects of Thin High-z Layers on the Hydrodynamics of Laser-Accelerated Plastic Targets

S. P. Obenschain; Denis G. Colombant; Max Karasik; Carl J. Pawley; V. Serlin; Andrew J. Schmitt; J.L. Weaver; John H. Gardner; Lee Phillips; Y. Aglitskiy; Y.-L. Chan; Jill Potkalitsky Dahlburg; M. Klapisch

Experimental results and simulations that study the effects of thin metallic layers with high atomic number (high-Z) on the hydrodynamics of laser accelerated plastic targets are presented. These experiments employ a laser pulse with a low-intensity foot that rises into a high-intensity main pulse. This pulse shape simulates the generic shape needed for high-gain fusion implosions. Imprint of laser nonuniformity during start up of the low intensity foot is a well-known seed for hydrodynamic instability. Large reductions are observed in hydrodynamic instability seeded by laser imprint when certain minimum thickness gold or palladium layers are applied to the laser-illuminated surface of the targets. The experiment indicates that the reduction in imprint is at least as large as that obtained by a 6 times improvement in the laser uniformity. Simulations supported by experiments are presented showing that during the low intensity foot the laser light can be nearly completely absorbed by the high-Z layer. X ra...


Physics of Plasmas | 2000

Effects of radiation on direct-drive laser fusion targets

Denis G. Colombant; Stephen E. Bodner; Andrew J. Schmitt; M. Klapisch; John H. Gardner; Y. Aglitskiy; A. V. Deniz; S. P. Obenschain; Carl J. Pawley; V. Serlin; J.L. Weaver

The role played by radiation in the radiation-preheated direct-drive laser fusion target design is discussed. The soft x-rays emitted during the foot of the laser pulse—at a few 1012 W/cm2—preheat the low-opacity foam ablator which helps to control the Rayleigh–Taylor instability. The foam opacity is, however, thick enough to stop that radiation, keeping the fuel on a low adiabat. Radiation effects are also important in the blow-off corona of the target because they establish a long scale-length plasma. This may help to shield the ablation region from the nonuniformities in the laser absorption.


Optics Communications | 1995

Production of high energy, uniform focal profiles with the Nike laser

Thomas Lehecka; R. H. Lehmberg; A. V. Deniz; K. A. Gerber; Stephen P. Obenschain; Carl J. Pawley; Mark S. Pronko; C. A. Sullivan

Abstract Nike, a KrF laser facility at the Naval Research Laboratory, is designed to produce high intensity, ultra-uniform focal profiles for experiments relating to direct drive inertial confinement fusion. We present measurements of focal profiles through the next-to-last amplifier, a 20 × 20 cm 2 aperture electron beam pumped amplifier capable of producing more than 120 J of output in a 120 ns pulse. Using echelon free induced spatial incoherence beam smoothing this system has produced focal profiles with less than 2% tilt and curvature and less than 2% rms variation from a flat top distribution.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 1999

X-RAY CRYSTAL IMAGERS FOR INERTIAL CONFINEMENT FUSION EXPERIMENTS (INVITED)

Y. Aglitskiy; Thomas Lehecka; S. P. Obenschain; Carl J. Pawley; C. M. Brown; John F. Seely

We report on our continued development of high resolution monochromatic x-ray imaging system based on spherically curved crystals. This system can be extensively used in the relevant experiments of the inertial confinement fusion (ICF) program. The system is currently used, but not limited to diagnostics of the targets ablatively accelerated by the Nike KrF laser. A spherically curved quartz crystal (2d=6.687 03 A, R=200 mm) has been used to produce monochromatic backlit images with the He-like Si resonance line (1865 eV) as the source of radiation. Another quartz crystal (2d=8.5099 A, R=200 mm) with the H-like Mg resonance line (1473 eV) has been used for backlit imaging with higher contrast. The spatial resolution of the x-ray optical system is 1.7 μm in selected places and 2–3 μm over a larger area. A second crystal with a separate backlighter was added to the imaging system. This makes it possible to make use of all four strips of the framing camera. Time resolved, 20× magnified, backlit monochromatic...

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Y. Aglitskiy

Science Applications International Corporation

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John H. Gardner

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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Thomas Lehecka

Science Applications International Corporation

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J. D. Sethian

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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S. P. Obenschain

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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V. Serlin

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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Stephen E. Bodner

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Stephen P. Obenschain

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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K. A. Gerber

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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Andrew J. Schmitt

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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