E. N. Loomis
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by E. N. Loomis.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008
S. H. Batha; Robert Aragonez; F. Archuleta; Tom Archuleta; J. F. Benage; J. A. Cobble; Joseph Cowan; Valerie E. Fatherley; K. A. Flippo; D. C. Gautier; R. P. Gonzales; Scott R. Greenfield; B. M. Hegelich; T. R. Hurry; R. P. Johnson; J. L. Kline; S. Letzring; E. N. Loomis; F. E. Lopez; S. N. Luo; D. S. Montgomery; John A. Oertel; Dennis L. Paisley; S.-M. Reid; P. G. Sanchez; Achim Seifter; T. Shimada; J. Workman
The newly upgraded TRIDENT high-energy-density (HED) facility provides high-energy short-pulse laser-matter interactions with powers in excess of 200 TW and energies greater than 120 J. In addition, TRIDENT retains two long-pulse (nanoseconds to microseconds) beams that are available for simultaneous use in either the same experiment or a separate one. The facilitys flexibility is enhanced by the presence of two separate target chambers with a third undergoing commissioning. This capability allows the experimental configuration to be optimized by choosing the chamber with the most advantageous geometry and features. The TRIDENT facility also provides a wide range of standard instruments including optical, x-ray, and particle diagnostics. In addition, one chamber has a 10 in. manipulator allowing OMEGA and National Ignition Facility (NIF) diagnostics to be prototyped and calibrated.
Physical Review E | 2008
Damian C. Swift; Richard G. Kraus; E. N. Loomis; D. G. Hicks; J. M. McNaney; R. P. Johnson
We derive expressions for shock formation based on the local curvature of the flow characteristics during dynamic compression. Given a specific ramp adiabat, calculated for instance from the equation of state for a substance, the ideal nonlinear shape for an applied ramp loading history can be determined. We discuss the region affected by lateral release, which can be presented in compact form for the ideal loading history. Example calculations are given for representative metals and plastic ablators. Continuum dynamics (hydrocode) simulations were in good agreement with the algebraic forms. Example applications are presented for several classes of laser-loading experiment, identifying conditions where shocks are desired but not formed, and where long-duration ramps are desired.
Physics of Plasmas | 2013
F. W. Doss; E. N. Loomis; L. Welser-Sherrill; James R. Fincke; K. A. Flippo; Paul Keiter
In a turbulence experiment conducted at the Omega Laser Facility [Boehly et al., Opt. Commun. 133, 495 (1997)]], regions of 60u2009mg/cc foam are separated by an aluminum plate running the length of a 1.6u2009mm shock tube. Two counter-propagating laser-driven shocks are used to create a high speed, ΔV=140u2009km/s shear flow environment, sustained for ∼10u2009ns, while canceling the transverse pressure gradient across the interface. The spreading of the aluminum by shear-instability-induced mixing is measured by x-ray radiography. The width of the mix region is compared to simulations. Reynolds numbers ≳4×105 are achieved within the layer. Following the onset of shear, we observe striations corresponding to the dominant mode growth and their transition through non-linear structures to developed turbulence.
Physics of Plasmas | 2015
F. W. Doss; J. L. Kline; K. A. Flippo; T. S. Perry; B. G. DeVolder; I.L. Tregillis; E. N. Loomis; E. C. Merritt; T. J. Murphy; L. Welser-Sherrill; James R. Fincke
An indirectly-driven shock tube experiment fielded on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) was used to create a high-energy-density hydrodynamics platform at unprecedented scale. Scaling up a shear-induced mixing experiment previously fielded at OMEGA, the NIF shear platform drives 130 μm/ns shocks into a CH foam-filled shock tube (∼ 60 mg/cc) with interior dimensions of 1.5 mm diameter and 5 mm length. The pulse-shaping capabilities of the NIF are used to extend the drive for >10 ns, and the large interior tube volumes are used to isolate physics-altering edge effects from the region of interest. The scaling of the experiment to the NIF allows for considerable improvement in maximum driving time of hydrodynamics, in fidelity of physics under examination, and in diagnostic clarity. Details of the experimental platform and post-shot simulations used in the analysis of the platform-qualifying data are presented. Hydrodynamic scaling is used to compare shear data from OMEGA with that from NIF, suggesting a possible change in the dimensionality of the instability at late times from one platform to the other.
Physics of Plasmas | 2011
E. N. Loomis; D. G. Braun; S. H. Batha; C. Sorce; O. L. Landen
Isolated defects on inertial confinement fusion ignition capsules are a concern as defects taller than a few hundred nanometers are calculated to form jets of high-Z material, which enter the main fuel. If this mixing of high-Z material is not controlled, a serious degradation in thermonuclear burn can occur. A path towards controlling the growth of defects on the outer surface of plastic capsules is currently under development, but requires accurate predictions of defect evolution driven by the early time ablative Richtmyer-Meshkov (RM) effect. The chief uncertainty is the Equation of State (EOS) for polystyrene and its effect on ablative RM. We report on measurements of the growth of isolated defects made at the onset of ablative RM oscillations driven by x-ray ablation to differentiate between EOS models used in design calculations. Experiments at the OMEGA laser [T. R. Boehly et al., Opt. Commun. 133, 495 (1997)] used on-axis area backlighting radiography and x-ray framing cameras to determine bump ar...
Physics of Plasmas | 2013
F. W. Doss; James R. Fincke; E. N. Loomis; L. Welser-Sherrill; K. A. Flippo
The counterpropagating shear experiment has previously demonstrated the ability to create regions of shock-driven shear, balanced symmetrically in pressure, and experiencing minimal net drift. This allows for the creation of a high-Mach-number high-energy-density shear environment. New data from the counterpropagating shear campaign is presented, and both hydrocode modeling and theoretical analysis in the context of a Reynolds-averaged-Navier-Stokes model suggest turbulent dissipation of energy from the supersonic flow bounding the layer is a significant driver in its expansion. A theoretical minimum shear flow Mach number threshold is suggested for substantial thermal-turbulence coupling.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014
K. A. Flippo; J. L. Kline; F. W. Doss; E. N. Loomis; M. Emerich; B. G. DeVolder; T. J. Murphy; K. B. Fournier; D. H. Kalantar; S. P. Regan; M. A. Barrios; E. C. Merritt; T. S. Perry; I.L. Tregillis; L. Welser-Sherrill; James R. Fincke
A very large area (7.5 mm(2)) laser-driven x-ray backlighter, termed the Big Area BackLighter (BABL) has been developed for the National Ignition Facility (NIF) to support high energy density experiments. The BABL provides an alternative to Pinhole-Apertured point-projection Backlighting (PABL) for a large field of view. This bypasses the challenges for PABL in the equatorial plane of the NIF target chamber where space is limited because of the unconverted laser light that threatens the diagnostic aperture, the backlighter foil, and the pinhole substrate. A transmission experiment using 132 kJ of NIF laser energy at a maximum intensity of 8.52 × 10(14) W/cm(2) illuminating the BABL demonstrated good conversion efficiency of >3.5% into K-shell emission producing ~4.6 kJ of high energy x rays, while yielding high contrast images with a highly uniform background that agree well with 2D simulated spectra and spatial profiles.
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 | 2015
E. C. Merritt; F. W. Doss; E. N. Loomis; K. A. Flippo; J. L. Kline
Counter-propagating shear experiments conducted at the OMEGA Laser Facility have been evaluating the effect of target initial conditions, specifically the characteristics of a tracer foil located at the shear boundary, on Kelvin-Helmholtz instability evolution and experiment transition toward nonlinearity and turbulence in the high-energy-density (HED) regime. Experiments are focused on both identifying and uncoupling the dependence of the model initial turbulent length scale in variable-density turbulence models of k-ϵ type on competing physical instability seed lengths as well as developing a path toward fully developed turbulent HED experiments. We present results from a series of experiments controllably and independently varying two initial types of scale lengths in the experiment: the thickness and surface roughness (surface perturbation scale spectrum) of a tracer layer at the shear interface. We show that decreasing the layer thickness and increasing the surface roughness both have the ability to increase the relative mixing in the system, and thus theoretically decrease the time required to begin transitioning to turbulence in the system. We also show that we can connect a change in observed mix width growth due to increased foil surface roughness to an analytically predicted change in model initial turbulent scale lengths.
Physics of Plasmas | 2014
E. N. Loomis; F. W. Doss; K. A. Flippo; James R. Fincke
We report on the novel integration of streaked radiography into a counter-flowing High Energy Density (HED) shear environment that continually measures a growing mix layer of Al separating two low-density CH foams. Measurements of the mix width allow us to validate compressible turbulence models and with streaked imaging, make this possible with a minimal number of experiments on large laser facilities. In this paper, we describe how the HED counter-flowing shear layer is created and diagnosed with streaked radiography. We then compare the streaked data to previous two-dimensional, single frame radiography and radiation hydrodynamic simulations of the experiment with inline compressible turbulent mix models.