Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where J. Pino is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by J. Pino.


Physics of Plasmas | 2014

Hydrodynamic instability growth and mix experiments at the National Ignition Facilitya)

V. A. Smalyuk; M. A. Barrios; J. A. Caggiano; D. T. Casey; C. Cerjan; D. S. Clark; M. J. Edwards; J. A. Frenje; M. Gatu-Johnson; Vladimir Yu. Glebov; G. P. Grim; S. W. Haan; B. A. Hammel; Alex V. Hamza; D. Hoover; W. W. Hsing; O. A. Hurricane; J. D. Kilkenny; J. L. Kline; J. P. Knauer; J. J. Kroll; O. L. Landen; J. D. Lindl; T. Ma; J. McNaney; M. Mintz; A. S. Moore; A. Nikroo; T. Parham; J. L. Peterson

Hydrodynamic instability growth and its effects on implosion performance were studied at the National Ignition Facility [G. H. Miller, E. I. Moses, and C. R. Wuest, Opt. Eng. 443, 2841 (2004)]. Implosion performance and mix have been measured at peak compression using plastic shells filled with tritium gas and containing embedded localized carbon-deuterium diagnostic layers in various locations in the ablator. Neutron yield and ion temperature of the deuterium-tritium fusion reactions were used as a measure of shell-gas mix, while neutron yield of the tritium-tritium fusion reaction was used as a measure of implosion performance. The results have indicated that the low-mode hydrodynamic instabilities due to surface roughness were the primary culprits for yield degradation, with atomic ablator-gas mix playing a secondary role. In addition, spherical shells with pre-imposed 2D modulations were used to measure instability growth in the acceleration phase of the implosions. The capsules were imploded using ig...


Physics of Plasmas | 2014

Development of the CD Symcap platform to study gas-shell mix in implosions at the National Ignition Facility

D. T. Casey; V. A. Smalyuk; Robert Tipton; J. Pino; Gary P. Grim; B. A. Remington; Dana P. Rowley; S. V. Weber; M. A. Barrios; L. R. Benedetti; D. L. Bleuel; E. Bond; David K. Bradley; J. A. Caggiano; D. A. Callahan; Charles Cerjan; K. C. Chen; D. H. Edgell; M. J. Edwards; D. N. Fittinghoff; J. A. Frenje; M. Gatu-Johnson; Vladimir Yu. Glebov; S. Glenn; N. Guler; S. W. Haan; Alex V. Hamza; R. Hatarik; H. W. Herrmann; D. Hoover

Surrogate implosions play an important role at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) for isolating aspects of the complex physical processes associated with fully integrated ignition experiments. The newly developed CD Symcap platform has been designed to study gas-shell mix in indirectly driven, pure T2-gas filled CH-shell implosions equipped with 4 μm thick CD layers. This configuration provides a direct nuclear signature of mix as the DT yield (above a characterized D contamination background) is produced by D from the CD layer in the shell, mixing into the T-gas core. The CD layer can be placed at different locations within the CH shell to probe the depth and extent of mix. CD layers placed flush with the gas-shell interface and recessed up to 8u2009μm have shown that most of the mix occurs at the inner-shell surface. In addition, time-gated x-ray images of the hotspot show large brightly radiating objects traversing through the hotspot around bang-time, which are likely chunks of CH/CD plastic. This platf...


Physics of Plasmas | 2014

Investigation of ion kinetic effects in direct-drive exploding-pusher implosions at the NIF

Michael Rosenberg; Alex Zylstra; F. H. Séguin; H. G. Rinderknecht; Johan A. Frenje; M. Gatu Johnson; H. Sio; C. Waugh; N. Sinenian; C. K. Li; R. D. Petrasso; P.W. McKenty; M. Hohenberger; P. B. Radha; J. A. Delettrez; V. Yu. Glebov; R. Betti; V.N. Goncharov; J. P. Knauer; T. C. Sangster; S. LePape; A. J. Mackinnon; J. Pino; J. M. McNaney; J. R. Rygg; Peter A. Amendt; C. Bellei; L. R. Benedetti; L. Berzak Hopkins; R. Bionta

Measurements of yield, ion temperature, areal density (ρR), shell convergence, and bang time have been obtained in shock-driven, D2 and D3He gas-filled “exploding-pusher” inertial confinement fusion (ICF) implosions at the National Ignition Facility to assess the impact of ion kinetic effects. These measurements probed the shock convergence phase of ICF implosions, a critical stage in hot-spot ignition experiments. The data complement previous studies of kinetic effects in shock-driven implosions. Ion temperature and fuel ρR inferred from fusion-product spectroscopy are used to estimate the ion-ion mean free path in the gas. A trend of decreasing yields relative to the predictions of 2D draco hydrodynamics simulations with increasing Knudsen number (the ratio of ion-ion mean free path to minimum shell radius) suggests that ion kinetic effects are increasingly impacting the hot fuel region, in general agreement with previous results. The long mean free path conditions giving rise to ion kinetic effects in ...


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Symmetry tuning of a near one-dimensional 2-shock platform for code validation at the National Ignition Facility

S. F. Khan; S. A. MacLaren; J. D. Salmonson; T. Ma; G. A. Kyrala; J. Pino; J. R. Rygg; J. E. Field; R. Tommasini; J. E. Ralph; D. Turnbull; A. J. Mackinnon; K. L. Baker; L. R. Benedetti; D. K. Bradley; Peter M. Celliers; E. L. Dewald; T. R. Dittrich; L. Berzak Hopkins; N. Izumi; M. L. Kervin; J. L. Kline; S. R. Nagel; A. Pak; Robert Tipton

We introduce a new quasi 1-D implosion experimental platform at the National Ignition Facility designed to validate physics models as well as to study various Inertial Confinement Fusion aspects such as implosion symmetry, convergence, hydrodynamic instabilities, and shock timing. The platform has been developed to maintain shell sphericity throughout the compression phase and produce a round hot core at stagnation. This platform utilizes a 2-shock 1u2009MJ pulse with 340 TW peak power in a near-vacuum Au Hohlraum and a CH ablator capsule uniformly doped with 1% Si. We have performed several inflight radiography, symmetry capsule, and shock timing experiments in order to tune the symmetry of the capsule to near round throughout several epochs of the implosion. Adjusting the relative powers of the inner and outer cones of beams has allowed us to control the drive at the poles and equator of the capsule, thus providing the mechanism to achieve a spherical capsule convergence. Details and results of the tuning e...


Journal of Instrumentation | 2017

Mix and hydrodynamic instabilities on NIF

V. A. Smalyuk; H. F. Robey; D. T. Casey; D. S. Clark; T. Döppner; S. W. Haan; B. A. Hammel; A. G. MacPhee; D. Martinez; J. L. Milovich; J. L. Peterson; L. Pickworth; J. Pino; K. Raman; Robert Tipton; C. R. Weber; K. L. Baker; B. Bachmann; L. Berzak Hopkins; E. Bond; J. A. Caggiano; D. A. Callahan; Peter M. Celliers; C. Cerjan; S. Dixit; M. J. Edwards; S. Felker; J. E. Field; D. N. Fittinghoff; N. Gharibyan

Several new platforms have been developed to experimentally measure hydrodynamic instabilities in all phases of indirect-drive, inertial confinement fusion implosions on National Ignition Facility. At the ablation front, instability growth of pre-imposed modulations was measured with a face-on, x-ray radiography platform in the linear regime using the Hydrodynamic Growth Radiography (HGR) platform. Modulation growth of native roughness modulations and engineering features (fill tubes and capsule support membranes) were measured in conditions relevant to layered DT implosions. A new experimental platform was developed to measure instability growth at the ablator-ice interface. In the deceleration phase of implosions, several experimental platforms were developed to measure both low-mode asymmetries and high-mode perturbations near peak compression with x-ray and nuclear techniques. In one innovative technique, the self-emission from the hot spot was enhanced with argon dopant to self-backlight the shell in-flight. To stabilize instability growth, new adiabat-shaping techniques were developed using the HGR platform and applied in layered DT implosions.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Assessment of ion kinetic effects in shock-driven inertial confinement fusion implosions using fusion burn imaging

M. Rosenberg; F. H. Séguin; Peter A. Amendt; S. Atzeni; H. G. Rinderknecht; Nelson M. Hoffman; Alex Zylstra; C. K. Li; H. Sio; M. Gatu Johnson; J. A. Frenje; R. D. Petrasso; V. Yu. Glebov; C. Stoeckl; W. Seka; F. J. Marshall; J. A. Delettrez; T. C. Sangster; R. Betti; S. C. Wilks; J. Pino; Grigory Kagan; K. Molvig; A. Nikroo

The significance and nature of ion kinetic effects in D3He-filled, shock-driven inertial confinement fusion implosions are assessed through measurements of fusion burn profiles. Over this series of experiments, the ratio of ion-ion mean free path to minimum shell radius (the Knudsen number, NK) was varied from 0.3 to 9 in order to probe hydrodynamic-like to strongly kinetic plasma conditions; as the Knudsen number increased, hydrodynamic models increasingly failed to match measured yields, while an empirically-tuned, first-step model of ion kinetic effects better captured the observed yield trends [Rosenberg et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 185001 (2014)]. Here, spatially resolved measurements of the fusion burn are used to examine kinetic ion transport effects in greater detail, adding an additional dimension of understanding that goes beyond zero-dimensional integrated quantities to one-dimensional profiles. In agreement with the previous findings, a comparison of measured and simulated burn profiles shows...


Physics of Plasmas | 2014

Simulations of indirectly driven gas-filled capsules at the National Ignition Facility

S. V. Weber; D. T. Casey; David C. Eder; J. D. Kilkenny; J. Pino; V. A. Smalyuk; Gary P. Grim; B. A. Remington; Dana P. Rowley; C. B. Yeamans; Robert Tipton; M. A. Barrios; R. Benedetti; L. Berzak Hopkins; D. L. Bleuel; E. Bond; David K. Bradley; J. A. Caggiano; D. A. Callahan; Charles Cerjan; D. S. Clark; L. Divol; D. H. Edgell; M. J. Edwards; M. J. Eckart; D. N. Fittinghoff; J. A. Frenje; M. Gatu-Johnson; Vladimir Yu. Glebov; S. Glenn

Gas-filled capsules imploded with indirect drive on the National Ignition Facility have been employed as symmetry surrogates for cryogenic-layered ignition capsules and to explore interfacial mix. Plastic capsules containing deuterated layers and filled with tritium gas provide a direct measure of mix of ablator into the gas fuel. Other plastic capsules have employed DT or D3He gas fill. We present the results of two-dimensional simulations of gas-filled capsule implosions with known degradation sources represented as in modeling of inertial confinement fusion ignition designs; these are time-dependent drive asymmetry, the capsule support tent, roughness at material interfaces, and prescribed gas-ablator interface mix. Unlike the case of cryogenic-layered implosions, many observables of gas-filled implosions are in reasonable agreement with predictions of these simulations. Yields of TT and DT neutrons as well as other x-ray and nuclear diagnostics are matched for CD-layered implosions. Yields of DT-fille...


Physics of Plasmas | 2017

Development of an inertial confinement fusion platform to study charged-particle-producing nuclear reactions relevant to nuclear astrophysics

M. Gatu Johnson; A. Zylstra; A. Bacher; C. R. Brune; D. T. Casey; C.J. Forrest; H. W. Herrmann; M. Hohenberger; D. B. Sayre; R. Bionta; J.-L. Bourgade; J. A. Caggiano; Charles Cerjan; R. S. Craxton; D. Dearborn; M. Farrell; J. A. Frenje; E. M. Garcia; V. Yu. Glebov; Gerald M. Hale; Edward P. Hartouni; R. Hatarik; M. Hohensee; D. M. Holunga; M. L. Hoppe; R. Janezic; S. F. Khan; J. D. Kilkenny; Y. Kim; J. P. Knauer

This paper describes the development of a platform to study astrophysically relevant nuclear reactions using inertial-confinement fusion implosions on the OMEGA and National Ignition Facility laser facilities, with a particular focus on optimizing the implosions to study charged-particle-producing reactions. Primary requirements on the platform are high yield, for high statistics in the fusion product measurements, combined with low areal density, to allow the charged fusion products to escape. This is optimally achieved with direct-drive exploding pusher implosions using thin-glass-shell capsules. Mitigation strategies to eliminate a possible target sheath potential which would accelerate the emitted ions are discussed. The potential impact of kinetic effects on the implosions is also considered. The platform is initially employed to study the complementary T(t,2n)α, T(3He,np)α and 3He(3He,2p)α reactions. Proof-of-principle results from the first experiments demonstrating the ability to accurately measur...


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Using inertial fusion implosions to measure the T+He3 fusion cross section at nucleosynthesis-relevant energies

Alex Zylstra; H. W. Herrmann; M. Gatu Johnson; Y. Kim; J. A. Frenje; Gerry Hale; C. K. Li; M. S. Rubery; Mark W. Paris; Andrew Bacher; C. R. Brune; C.J. Forrest; V. Yu. Glebov; R. Janezic; Dennis Paul McNabb; A. Nikroo; J. Pino; T. C. Sangster; F. H. Séguin; W. Seka; H. Sio; C. Stoeckl; R. D. Petrasso

Light nuclei were created during big-bang nucleosynthesis (BBN). Standard BBN theory, using rates inferred from accelerator-beam data, cannot explain high levels of ^{6}Li in low-metallicity stars. Using high-energy-density plasmas we measure the T(^{3}He,γ)^{6}Li reaction rate, a candidate for anomalously high ^{6}Li production; we find that the rate is too low to explain the observations, and different than values used in common BBN models. This is the first data directly relevant to BBN, and also the first use of laboratory plasmas, at comparable conditions to astrophysical systems, to address a problem in nuclear astrophysics.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

Quasi-static model of collimated jets and radio lobes. I. Accretion disk and jets

Stirling A. Colgate; T. Kenneth Fowler; Hui Li; J. Pino

This is the first of a series of papers showing that when an efficient dynamo can be maintained by accretion disks around supermassive black holes in active galactic nuclei, it can lead to the formation of a powerful, magnetic helix that could explain both the observed radio jet/lobe structures on very large scales and ultimately the enormous power inferred from the observed ultra-high-energy cosmic rays. In this work, we solve a set of one-dimensional equations similar to the steady-state standard accretion disk model, but now including the large-scale magnetic fields giving rises to jets. We find that the frequently made assumption that large-scale fields are frozen into the disk is fundamentally incorrect, due to the necessity for current and the accreting mass to flow perpendicular to magnetic flux surfaces. A correct treatment greatly simplifies the calculations, yielding fields that leave the disk nearly vertically with magnetic profiles uniquely determined by disk angular momentum conservation. Representative solutions of the magnetic fields in different radial regions of the disk surface are given, and they determine the overall key features in the jet structure and its dissipation, which will be the subjects of later papers.

Collaboration


Dive into the J. Pino's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. T. Casey

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert Tipton

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. A. Frenje

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. F. Khan

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. A. Caggiano

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

R. D. Petrasso

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

R. Hatarik

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. K. Li

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

H. W. Herrmann

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge