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Dive into the research topics where I. C. Blesener is active.

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Featured researches published by I. C. Blesener.


Physics of Plasmas | 2010

Initial experiments using radial foils on the Cornell Beam Research Accelerator pulsed power generator

P.-A. Gourdain; I. C. Blesener; J. B. Greenly; D. A. Hammer; P. F. Knapp; B. R. Kusse; P. C. Schrafel

A novel technique involving radial foil explosions can produce high energy density plasmas. A current flows radially inward in a 5 μm thin aluminum foil from a circular anode, which contacts the foil on its outer rim, to the cathode, which connects to the foil at its geometrical center. When using small “pin” cathodes (∼1 mm in diameter) on a medium size pulsed-current generator such as the Cornell Beam Research Accelerator, the central magnetic field approaches 400 T, yielding magnetic pressures larger than 0.5 Mbar. While the dynamics is similar to radial wire arrays, radial foil discharges have very distinct characteristics. First a plasma jet forms, with densities near 5×1018 cm−3. J×B forces lift the foil upward with velocities of ∼200 km/s. A plasma bubble with electron densities superior to 5×1019 cm−3 then develops, surrounding a central plasma column, carrying most of the cathode current. X-ray bursts coming from the center of this column were recorded at 1 keV photon energy. As the magnetic bubb...


Physics of Plasmas | 2007

Wire core and coronal plasma expansion in wire-array Z pinches with small numbers of wires

T. A. Shelkovenko; S. A. Pikuz; J. D. Douglass; I. C. Blesener; J. B. Greenly; R. D. McBride; D. A. Hammer; B. R. Kusse

Wire core and coronal plasma formation and expansion in wire-array Z pinches with small numbers of wires have been studied on a 1MA, 100ns rise time pulsed power generator and a 500kA, 50ns generator. Two-frame point-projection x-ray imaging and three-frame laser optical imaging and interferometry were the principal diagnostic methods used for these studies. The x-ray images show that dense coronal plasma forms and is maintained close to each dense wire core in the array. A less dense, rapidly expanding (∼10μm∕ns) coronal plasma, best seen in the laser images, surrounds the ∼100μm radius dense corona. These results are in agreement with computer simulations and modeling carried out by Yu et al. [Phys. Plasmas 14, 022705 (2007)]. Results are also presented for the dependence of the wire core and coronal plasma expansion rates on the wire diameter, number of wires and current through individual wires and the overall configuration for Al, Cu, and W wire arrays. For example, the W wire dense core expansion ra...


DENSE Z‐PINCHES: Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Dense#N#Z‐Pinches | 2009

The Role of Flux Advection in the Development of the Ablation Streams and Precursors of Wire Array Z‐pinches

J. B. Greenly; M. R. Martin; I. C. Blesener; D. A. Chalenski; P. F. Knapp; R. D. McBride

B‐dot probes for the first time have successfully measured the field through implosion of wire arrays on COBRA. The probe data confirm an advective magnetic evolution of closed field lines during the onset of ablation that was first seen in 2D GORGON simulations.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2009

Axial x-ray backlighting of wire-array Z-pinches using X pinches

I. C. Blesener; J. B. Greenly; S. A. Pikuz; T. A. Shelkovenko; S. Vishniakou; David A. Hammer; B. R. Kusse

For the first time, a geometry has been developed to allow for an axial imaging system for wire-array Z-pinch experiments that produce high-resolution x-ray images. The new geometry required a significant redesign of the electrode hardware. Calibrated areal density measurements of the Z-pinch plasma including wire cores, coronal plasma, streaming plasma, and the precursor were obtained. The system used eight-wire molybdenum (Mo) X pinches in series with and directly below the Z-pinch axis to provide micron-scale x-rays sources for point-projection radiography. The images formed on the x-ray sensitive film had a 15 mm diameter field of view at the center height of the array and a magnification of about 7.5:1. Titanium (Ti) filters in front of the film transmitted radiation in the spectral range of 3-5 keV. For calibration, a separate film with the same thickness Ti filter was placed the same distance from the X pinch. This film had an unobstructed path that bypasses the Z-pinch but included step wedges for calibration of the Z-pinch plasma. The step wedges had thicknesses of tungsten (W) ranging from 0.015 to 1.1 microm to obtain areal density measurements of the W plasma from the wire-array. Images had subnanosecond temporal resolution and about 10 microm spatial resolution.


Physics of Plasmas | 2009

Study of the effect of current rise time on the formation of the precursor column in cylindrical wire array Z pinches at 1 MA

S. C. Bott; D. Haas; Y. Eshaq; Utako Ueda; F. N. Beg; D. A. Hammer; B. R. Kusse; J. B. Greenly; T. A. Shelkovenko; S. A. Pikuz; I. C. Blesener; R. D. McBride; J. D. Douglass; K. S. Bell; P. F. Knapp; J. P. Chittenden; S. V. Lebedev; S. N. Bland; G. Hall; A. Marocchino; A. Harvey-Thomson; M. G. Haines; J. B. A. Palmer; A.A. Esaulov; David J. Ampleford

The limited understanding of the mechanisms driving the mass ablation rate of cylindrical wires arrays is presently one of the major limitations in predicting array performance at the higher current levels required for inertial confinement fusion (ICF) ignition. Continued investigation of this phenomenon is crucial to realize the considerable potential for wire arrays to drive both ICF and inertial fusion energy, by enabling a predictive capability in computational modeling. We present the first study to directly compare the mass ablation rates of wire arrays as a function of the current rise rate. Formation of the precursor column is investigated on both the MAPGIE (1 MA, 250ns [Mitchell et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 67, 1533 (1996)]) and COBRA (1 MA, 100ns [Greenly et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 79, 073501 (2008)]) generators, and results are used to infer the change in the effective ablation velocity induced by the rise rate of the drive current. Laser shadowography, gated extreme ultraviolet (XUV) imaging, a...


Physics of Plasmas | 2009

Implosion dynamics and radiation characteristics of wire-array Z pinches on the Cornell Beam Research Accelerator

R. D. McBride; T. A. Shelkovenko; S. A. Pikuz; D. A. Hammer; J. B. Greenly; B. R. Kusse; J. D. Douglass; P. F. Knapp; K. S. Bell; I. C. Blesener; D. A. Chalenski

Experimental results are presented that characterize the implosion dynamics and radiation output of wire-array Z pinches on the 1-MA, 100-ns rise-time Cornell Beam Research Accelerator (COBRA) [J. B. Greenly et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 79, 073501 (2008)]. The load geometries investigated include 20-mm-tall cylindrical arrays ranging from 4to16mm in diameter, and consisting of 8, 16, or 32 wires of either tungsten, aluminum, or Invar (64% iron, 36% nickel). Diagnostics fielded include an optical streak camera, a time-gated extreme-ultraviolet framing camera, a laser shadowgraph system, time-integrated pinhole cameras, an x-ray wide-band focusing spectrograph with spatial resolution, an x-ray streak camera, a load voltage monitor, a Faraday cup, a bolometer, silicon diodes, and diamond photoconducting detectors. The data produced by the entire suite of diagnostics are analyzed and presented to provide a detailed picture of the overall implosion process and resulting radiation output on COBRA. The highest x-r...


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Pinching of ablation streams via magnetic field curvature in wire-array Z-pinches

I. C. Blesener; J. B. Greenly; B. R. Kusse; Kate Blesener; C. E. Seyler; D. A. Hammer

In this paper, the shapes of the ablation streams in non-imploding cylindrical wire-array Z-pinches are investigated. Experimental observations using axial X pinch imaging show an azimuthal pinching of the streams that appear to depend on the topology of the global magnetic field. With fewer wires and increased interwire spacing, the radial component of the global field is increased; resulting in a stronger pinching of the streams. Computer simulations are used to model the magnetic field development and show that the sparser array has a significantly stronger azimuthal J→×B→ force.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008

Measurements of high-current electron beams from X pinches and wire array Z pinches

T. A. Shelkovenko; S. A. Pikuz; I. C. Blesener; R. D. McBride; K. S. Bell; David A. Hammer; A. V. Agafonov; Vera M. Romanova; A. R. Mingaleev

Some issues concerning high-current electron beam transport from the X pinch cross point to the diagnostic system and measurements of the beam current by Faraday cups are discussed. Results of computer simulation of electron beam propagation from the pinch to the Faraday cup give limits for the measured current for beams having different energy spreads. The beam is partially neutralized as it propagates from the X pinch to a diagnostic system, but within a Faraday cup diagnostic, space charge effects can be very important. Experimental results show evidence of such effects.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Ablation dynamics in coiled wire-array Z-pinches

G. Hall; S. V. Lebedev; F. Suzuki-Vidal; G. F. Swadling; J. P. Chittenden; S. N. Bland; A. J. Harvey-Thompson; P. F. Knapp; I. C. Blesener; R. D. McBride; D. A. Chalenski; Kate Blesener; J. B. Greenly; S. A. Pikuz; T. A. Shelkovenko; D. A. Hammer; B. R. Kusse

Experiments to study the ablation dynamics of coiled wire arrays were performed on the MAGPIE generator (1 MA, 240 ns) at Imperial College, and on the COBRA generator at Cornell Universitys Laboratory of Plasma Studies (1 MA, 100 ns). The MAGPIE generator was used to drive coiled wires in an inverse array configuration to study the distribution of ablated plasma. Using interferometry to study the plasma distribution during the ablation phase, absolute quantitative measurements of electron line density demonstrated very high density contrasts between coiled ablation streams and inter-stream regions many millimetres from the wire. The measured density contrasts for a coiled array were many times greater than that observed for a conventional array with straight wires, indicating that a much greater axial modulation of the ablated plasma may be responsible for the unique implosion dynamics of coiled arrays. Experiments on the COBRA generator were used to study the complex redirection of plasma around a coiled wire that gives rise to the ablation structure exhibited by coiled arrays. Observations of this complex 3D plasma structure were used to validate the current model of coiled array ablation dynamics [Hall et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 065003 (2008)], demonstrating irrefutably that plasma flow from the wires behaves as predicted. Coiled wires were observed to ablate and implode in the same manner on both machines, indicating that current rise time should not be an issue for the scaling of coiled arrays to larger machines with fast current rise times.Experiments to study the ablation dynamics of coiled wire arrays were performed on the MAGPIE generator (1 MA, 240 ns) at Imperial College, and on the COBRA generator at Cornell Universitys Laboratory of Plasma Studies (1 MA, 100 ns). The MAGPIE generator was used to drive coiled wires in an inverse array configuration to study the distribution of ablated plasma. Using interferometry to study the plasma distribution during the ablation phase, absolute quantitative measurements of electron line density demonstrated very high density contrasts between coiled ablation streams and inter-stream regions many millimetres from the wire. The measured density contrasts for a coiled array were many times greater than that observed for a conventional array with straight wires, indicating that a much greater axial modulation of the ablated plasma may be responsible for the unique implosion dynamics of coiled arrays. Experiments on the COBRA generator were used to study the complex redirection of plasma around a coile...


Physics of Plasmas | 2009

Azimuthally correlated ablation between z-pinch wire cores

J. Zier; J. D. Douglass; I. C. Blesener; K. S. Blesener; D. A. Chalenski; Ronald M. Gilgenbach; J. B. Greenly; D. A. Hammer; P. F. Knapp; B. R. Kusse; Y. Y. Lau; R. D. McBride; W. Syed; E. P. Yu

Azimuthally correlated wire core ablation was compared for closely spaced versus widely spaced wires in a 1 MA Z-pinch. X-ray point-projection diagnostics revealed that 240 μm spaced wires exhibited a correlation coefficient approaching unity in both real space and in k-space. This correlated ablation between wires at a fixed axial location is believed to occur due to an enhanced, localized Joule heating. Wires separated by 2.47 mm or greater were uncorrelated in real space, but correlated in k-space, indicating the ablation structure between wires was shifted in phase.

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P. F. Knapp

Sandia National Laboratories

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R. D. McBride

Sandia National Laboratories

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S. A. Pikuz

Lebedev Physical Institute

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