Johan A. Frenje
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Johan A. Frenje.
Physics of Plasmas | 2000
Damien G. Hicks; C. K. Li; F. H. Séguin; Abhay K. Ram; Johan A. Frenje; R. D. Petrasso; J. M. Soures; V. Yu. Glebov; D. D. Meyerhofer; S. Roberts; C. Sorce; C. Stöckl; Thomas C. Sangster; Thomas W. Phillips
Spectral measurements have been made of charged fusion products produced in deuterium + helium-3 filled targets irradiated by the OMEGA laser system [T. R. Boehly et al., Opt. Commun. 133, 495 (1997)]. Comparing the energy shifts of four particle types has allowed two distinct physical processes to be probed: Electrostatic acceleration in the low-density corona and energy loss in the high-density target. When the fusion burn occurred during the laser pulse, particle energy shifts were dominated by acceleration effects. Using a simple model for the accelerating field region, the time history of the target electrostatic potential was found and shown to decay to zero soon after laser irradiation was complete. When the fusion burn occurred after the pulse, particle energy shifts were dominated by energy losses in the target, allowing fundamental charged-particle stopping-power predictions to be tested. The results provide the first experimental verification of the general form of stopping power theories over ...
Physics of Plasmas | 2015
Nelson M. Hoffman; George B. Zimmerman; Kim Molvig; H. G. Rinderknecht; Michael Rosenberg; B. J. Albright; Andrei N. Simakov; Hong Sio; Alex Zylstra; Maria Gatu Johnson; F. H. Séguin; Johan A. Frenje; C. K. Li; R. D. Petrasso; David M. Higdon; Gowri Srinivasan; Vladimir Yu. Glebov; C. Stoeckl; W. Seka; T. Craig Sangster
“Reduced” (i.e., simplified or approximate) ion-kinetic (RIK) models in radiation-hydrodynamic simulations permit a useful description of inertial-confinement-fusion (ICF) implosions where kinetic deviations from hydrodynamic behavior are important. For implosions in or near the kinetic regime (i.e., when ion mean free paths are comparable to the capsule size), simulations using a RIK model give a detailed picture of the time- and space-dependent structure of imploding capsules, allow an assessment of the relative importance of various kinetic processes during the implosion, enable explanations of past and current observations, and permit predictions of the results of future experiments. The RIK simulation method described here uses moment-based reduced kinetic models for transport of mass, momentum, and energy by long-mean-free-path ions, a model for the decrease of fusion reactivity owing to the associated modification of the ion distribution function, and a model of hydrodynamic turbulent mixing. The t...
Nature Communications | 2015
Michael Rosenberg; C. K. Li; William Fox; I.V. Igumenshchev; F. H. Séguin; R. P. J. Town; Johan A. Frenje; C. Stoeckl; Vladimir Yu. Glebov; R. D. Petrasso
Magnetic reconnection, the annihilation and rearrangement of magnetic fields in a plasma, is a universal phenomenon that frequently occurs when plasmas carrying oppositely directed field lines collide. In most natural circumstances, the collision is asymmetric (the two plasmas having different properties), but laboratory research to date has been limited to symmetric configurations. In addition, the regime of strongly driven magnetic reconnection, where the ram pressure of the plasma dominates the magnetic pressure, as in several astrophysical environments, has also received little experimental attention. Thus, we have designed the experiments to probe reconnection in asymmetric, strongly driven, laser-generated plasmas. Here we show that, in this strongly driven system, the rate of magnetic flux annihilation is dictated by the relative flow velocities of the opposing plasmas and is insensitive to initial asymmetries. In addition, out-of-plane magnetic fields that arise from asymmetries in the three-dimensional plasma geometry have minimal impact on the reconnection rate, due to the strong flows.
Physics of Plasmas | 2014
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 ...
New Journal of Physics | 2013
C. K. Li; Alex Zylstra; Johan A. Frenje; F. H. Séguin; N. Sinenian; R. D. Petrasso; Peter A. Amendt; R. Bionta; S. Friedrich; G. W. Collins; E. L. Dewald; T. Döppner; S. H. Glenzer; D. G. Hicks; O. L. Landen; J. D. Kilkenny; A. J. Mackinnon; N. B. Meezan; J. E. Ralph; J. R. Rygg; J. L. Kline; G. A. Kyrala
Energy spectra and spectrally resolved one-dimensional fluence images of self-emitted charged-fusion products (14.7MeV D 3 He protons) are routinely measured from indirectly driven inertial-confinement fusion (ICF) experiments utilizing ignition-scaled hohlraums at the National Ignition Facility (NIF). A striking and consistent feature of these images is that the fluence of protons leaving the ICF target in the direction of the hohlraums laser entrance holes (LEHs) is very nonuniform spatially, in contrast to the very uniformfluence of protons leaving through the hohlraum equator. In addition, the measured nonuniformities are unpredictable, and vary greatly from shot to shot. These
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014
Michael Rosenberg; F. H. Séguin; C. Waugh; H. G. Rinderknecht; D. Orozco; Johan A. Frenje; M. Gatu Johnson; H. Sio; A. Zylstra; N. Sinenian; C. K. Li; R. D. Petrasso; V. Yu. Glebov; C. Stoeckl; M. Hohenberger; T. C. Sangster; S. LePape; A. J. Mackinnon; R. Bionta; O. L. Landen; R. A. Zacharias; Y. Kim; Hartmut Herrmann; J. D. Kilkenny
CR-39 solid-state nuclear track detectors are widely used in physics and in many inertial confinement fusion (ICF) experiments, and under ideal conditions these detectors have 100% detection efficiency for ∼0.5-8 MeV protons. When the fluence of incident particles becomes too high, overlap of particle tracks leads to under-counting at typical processing conditions (5 h etch in 6N NaOH at 80 °C). Short etch times required to avoid overlap can cause under-counting as well, as tracks are not fully developed. Experiments have determined the minimum etch times for 100% detection of 1.7-4.3-MeV protons and established that for 2.4-MeV protons, relevant for detection of DD protons, the maximum fluence that can be detected using normal processing techniques is ≲3 × 10(6) cm(-2). A CR-39-based proton detector has been developed to mitigate issues related to high particle fluences on ICF facilities. Using a pinhole and scattering foil several mm in front of the CR-39, proton fluences at the CR-39 are reduced by more than a factor of ∼50, increasing the operating yield upper limit by a comparable amount.
Computing in Science and Engineering | 2013
N. Sinenian; Alex Zylstra; M. J.-E. Manuel; Johan A. Frenje; A. Kanojia; Joshua Stillerman; R. D. Petrasso
A multithreaded modular software toolkit has been developed for centralized monitoring and control of complex scientific experiments and instruments. The Modular Control Toolkit (MCT) supports Unix-like operating systems and provides a reusable framework for user-developed modules to share data, setup software interlocks, and utilize a dedicated thread for hardware communication.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2018
David J. Ampleford; C. L. Ruiz; D. N. Fittinghoff; Jeremy D. Vaughan; Kelly Hahn; B. Lahmann; M. Gatu-Johnson; Johan A. Frenje; R. D. Petrasso; C. R. Ball; Andrew J. Maurer; P. F. Knapp; A. J. Harvey-Thompson; John Fisher; Perry Joel Alberto; J. Torres; G. W. Cooper; B. Jones; Gregory A. Rochau; M. J. May
We recently developed a one-dimensional imager of neutrons on the Z facility. The instrument is designed for Magnetized Liner Inertial Fusion (MagLIF) experiments, which produce D-D neutrons yields of ∼3 × 1012. X-ray imaging indicates that the MagLIF stagnation region is a 10-mm long, ∼100-μm diameter column. The small radial extents and present yields precluded useful radial resolution, so a one-dimensional imager was developed. The imaging component is a 100-mm thick tungsten slit; a rolled-edge slit limits variations in the acceptance angle along the source. CR39 was chosen as a detector due to its negligible sensitivity to the bright x-ray environment in Z. A layer of high density poly-ethylene is used to enhance the sensitivity of CR39. We present data from fielding the instrument on Z, demonstrating reliable imaging and track densities consistent with diagnosed yields. For yields ∼3 × 1012, we obtain resolutions of ∼500 μm.
Physics of Plasmas | 2015
Michael Rosenberg; C. K. Li; William Fox; Igor V. Igumenshchev; F. H. Séguin; R. P. J. Town; Johan A. Frenje; C. Stoeckl; Vladimir Yu. Glebov; R. D. Petrasso
Novel experiments to study the strongly-driven collision of parallel magnetic fields in β ∼ 10, laser-produced plasmas have been conducted using monoenergetic proton radiography. These experiments were designed to probe the process of magnetic flux pileup, which has been identified in prior laser-plasma experiments as a key physical mechanism in the reconnection of anti-parallel magnetic fields when the reconnection inflow is dominated by strong plasma flows. In the present experiments using colliding plasmas carrying parallel magnetic fields, the magnetic flux is found to be conserved and slightly compressed in the collision region. Two-dimensional (2D) particle-in-cell simulations predict a stronger flux compression and amplification of the magnetic field strength, and this discrepancy is attributed to the three-dimensional (3D) collision geometry. Future experiments may drive a stronger collision and further explore flux pileup in the context of the strongly-driven interaction of magnetic fields.
Physical Review Letters | 2010
V.N. Goncharov; T. C. Sangster; T. R. Boehly; S. X. Hu; I.V. Igumenshchev; F. J. Marshall; R.L. McCrory; D. D. Meyerhofer; P. B. Radha; W. Seka; S. Skupsky; C. Stoeckl; D. T. Casey; Johan A. Frenje; R. D. Petrasso