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Dive into the research topics where Hugo Doyle is active.

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Featured researches published by Hugo Doyle.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Developed turbulence and nonlinear amplification of magnetic fields in laboratory and astrophysical plasmas

J. Meinecke; P. Tzeferacos; A. R. Bell; R. Bingham; Robert B. Clarke; Eugene M. Churazov; R. Crowston; Hugo Doyle; R. Paul Drake; R. Heathcote; M. Koenig; Y. Kuramitsu; C. C. Kuranz; Dongwook Lee; Michael MacDonald; C. D. Murphy; M. Notley; Hye-Sook Park; A. Pelka; Alessandra Ravasio; Brian Reville; Youichi Sakawa; W.C. Wan; N. Woolsey; Roman Yurchak; Francesco Miniati; A. A. Schekochihin; D. Q. Lamb; G. Gregori

Significance Magnetic fields exist throughout the universe. Their energy density is comparable to the energy density of the fluid motions of the plasma in which they are embedded, making magnetic fields essential players in the dynamics of the luminous matter in the universe. The origin and the amplification of these magnetic fields to their observed strengths are far from being understood. The standard model for the origin of these galactic and intergalactic magnetic fields is through the amplification of seed fields via turbulent processes to the level consistent with current observations. For this process to be effective, the amplification needs to reach a strongly nonlinear phase. Experimental evidence of the initial nonlinear amplification of magnetic fields is presented in this paper. The visible matter in the universe is turbulent and magnetized. Turbulence in galaxy clusters is produced by mergers and by jets of the central galaxies and believed responsible for the amplification of magnetic fields. We report on experiments looking at the collision of two laser-produced plasma clouds, mimicking, in the laboratory, a cluster merger event. By measuring the spectrum of the density fluctuations, we infer developed, Kolmogorov-like turbulence. From spectral line broadening, we estimate a level of turbulence consistent with turbulent heating balancing radiative cooling, as it likely does in galaxy clusters. We show that the magnetic field is amplified by turbulent motions, reaching a nonlinear regime that is a precursor to turbulent dynamo. Thus, our experiment provides a promising platform for understanding the structure of turbulence and the amplification of magnetic fields in the universe.


Physics of Fluids | 2017

Characterizing shock waves in hydrogel using high speed imaging and a fiber-optic probe hydrophone

Phillip A. Anderson; Matthew Betney; Hugo Doyle; Brett Tully; Yiannis Ventikos; Nicholas Hawker; Ronald A. Roy

The impact of a stainless steel disk-shaped projectile launched by a single-stage light gas gun is used to generate planar shock waves with amplitudes on the order of 102MPa in a hydrogel target material. These shock waves are characterized using ultra-high-speed imaging as well as a fiber-optic probe hydrophone. Although the hydrogel equation of state (EOS) is unknown, the combination of these measurements with conservation of mass and momentum allows us to calculate pressure. It is also shown that although the hydrogel behaves similarly to water, the use of a water EOS underpredicts pressure amplitudes in the hydrogel by ∼10% at the shock front. Further, the water EOS predicts pressures approximately 2% higher than those determined by conservation laws for a given value of the shock velocity. Shot to shot repeatability is controlled to within 10%, with the shock speed and pressure increasing as a function of the velocity of the projectile at impact. Thus the projectile velocity may be used as an adequat...


8th International Conference on Inertial Fusion Sciences and Applications, IFSA 2013 | 2016

Thomson scattering measurement of a collimated plasma jet generated by a high-power laser system

Taishi Ishikawa; Youichi Sakawa; T. Morita; Yuta Yamaura; Yasuhiro Kuramitsu; T. Moritaka; Takayoshi Sano; R. Shimoda; Kentaro Tomita; Kiichiro Uchino; Shuichi Matsukiyo; A. Mizuta; Naofumi Ohnishi; R. Crowston; N. Woolsey; Hugo Doyle; G. Gregori; M. Koenig; C. Michaut; A. Pelka; Dawei Yuan; Y. T. Li; Kai Zhang; Jin Zhong; Fengchao Wang; Hideaki Takabe

One of the important and interesting problems in astrophysics and plasma physics is collimation of plasma jets. The collimation mechanism, which causes a plasma flow to propagate a long distance, has not been understood in detail. We have been investigating a model experiment to simulate astrophysical plasma jets with an external magnetic field [Nishio et al., EPJ. Web of Conferences 59, 15005 (2013)]. The experiment was performed by using Gekko XII HIPER laser system at Institute of Laser Engineering, Osaka University. We shot CH plane targets (3 mm × 3 mm × 10 μm) and observed rear-side plasma flows. A collimated plasma flow or plasma jet was generated by separating focal spots of laser beams. In this report, we measured plasma jet structure without an external magnetic field with shadowgraphy, and simultaneously measured the local parameters of the plasma jet, i.e., electron density, electron and ion temperatures, charge state, and drift velocity, with collective Thomson scattering.


IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science | 2014

Nanosecond imaging of shock-and jet-like features

Eleanor Tubman; R. Crowston; Reem Alraddadi; Hugo Doyle; J. Meinecke; J. E. Cross; Riccardo Bolis; Donald Q. Lamb; P. Tzeferacos; D. Doria; Brian Reville; H. Ahmed; M. Borghesi; G. Gregori; N. Woolsey

The production of shock- and collimated jet-like features is recorded from the self-emission of a plasma using a 16- frame camera, which can show the progression of the interaction over short (100s ns) durations. A cluster of laser beams, with intensity 1015 W/cm2, was focused onto a planar aluminum foil to produce a plasma that expanded into 0.7 mbar of argon gas. The acquisition of 16 ultrafast images on a single shot allows prompt spatial and temporal characterization of the plasma and enables the velocity of the jet- and shock-like features to be calculated.


Nature Physics | 2014

Turbulent amplification of magnetic fields in laboratory laser-produced shock waves

J. Meinecke; Hugo Doyle; Francesco Miniati; A. R. Bell; R. Bingham; R. Crowston; R. P. Drake; M. Fatenejad; M. Koenig; Y. Kuramitsu; C. C. Kuranz; D. Q. Lamb; Dongwook Lee; M. J. Macdonald; C. D. Murphy; H.-S. Park; A. Pelka; A. Ravasio; Youichi Sakawa; A. A. Schekochihin; Anthony Scopatz; P. Tzeferacos; W.C. Wan; N. Woolsey; R. Yurchak; Brian Reville; G. Gregori


Physical Review B | 2014

Electron-phonon equilibration in laser-heated gold films

T. G. White; P. Mabey; Dirk O. Gericke; N. J. Hartley; Hugo Doyle; David McGonegle; D. S. Rackstraw; Andrew Higginbotham; G. Gregori


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

Shock induced cavity collapse.

Jonathan Skidmore; Hugo Doyle; Brett Tully; Matthew Betney; P. S. Foster; Tim Ringrose; Rohan Ramasamy; James Parkin; Tom Edwards; Nicholas Hawker


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

Experimental and numerical investigation of cylindrical and hemispherical jet formation

Matthew Betney; P. S. Foster; Tim Ringrose; Tom Edwards; Brett Tully; Hugo Doyle; Nicholas Hawker


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Microsecond evolution of laser driven blast waves, the influence of shock asymmetries and the resulting development of magnetic fields

Eleanor Tubman; R. Crowston; G. Lam; G. Dimoline; R. Alraddadi; Hugo Doyle; J. Meinecke; J. E. Cross; R. Bolis; Donald Q. Lamb; P. Tzeferacos; D. Doria; Brian Reville; H. Ahmed; M. Borghesi; G. Gregori; N. Woolsey


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Turbulent amplification of magnetic fields in colliding laboratory jets

P. Tzeferacos; J. Meinecke; A. R. Bell; Hugo Doyle; R. Bingham; Eugene M. Churazov; R. Crowston; C. D. Murphy; N. Woolsey; R. P. Drake; C. C. Kuranz; M.J. MacDonald; W.C. Wan; M. Koenig; A. Pelka; A. Ravasio; R. Yurchak; Y. Kuramitsu; Y. Sakawa; H.-S. Park; Brian Reville; Francesco Miniati; A. A. Schekochihin; D. Q. Lamb; G. Gregori

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Brian Reville

Queen's University Belfast

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