King Fai Farley Law
Osaka University
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Featured researches published by King Fai Farley Law.
Applied Physics Letters | 2016
King Fai Farley Law; M. Bailly-Grandvaux; Alessio Morace; Shohei Sakata; Kazuki Matsuo; S. Kojima; X. Vaisseau; Yasunobu Arikawa; Akifumi Yogo; K. Kondo; Z.Z. Zhang; C. Bellei; J. J. Santos; Shinsuke Fujioka; H. Azechi
A kilo-tesla level, quasi-static magnetic field (B-field), which is generated with an intense laser-driven capacitor-coil target, was measured by proton deflectometry with a proper plasma shielding. Proton deflectometry is a direct and reliable method to diagnose strong, mm3-scale laser-produced B-field; however, this was not successful in the previous experiment. A target-normal-sheath-accelerated proton beam is deflected by Lorentz force in the laser-produced magnetic field with the resulting deflection pattern recorded on a radiochromic film stack. A 610u2009±u200930u2009T of B-field amplitude was inferred by comparing the experimental proton pattern with Monte-Carlo calculations. The amplitude and temporal evolutions of the laser-generated B-field were also measured by a differential magnetic probe, independently confirming the proton deflectometry measurement results.
Physics of Plasmas | 2016
S. Fujioka; Yasunobu Arikawa; S. Kojima; Tomoyuki Johzaki; H. Nagatomo; H. Sawada; Seung Ho Lee; Takashi Shiroto; Naofumi Ohnishi; Alessio Morace; X. Vaisseau; Shohei Sakata; Yuki Abe; Kazuki Matsuo; King Fai Farley Law; Shota Tosaki; Akifumi Yogo; Keisuke Shigemori; Yoichiro Hironaka; Zhe Zhang; Atsushi Sunahara; T. Ozaki; H. Sakagami; Kunioki Mima; Yasushi Fujimoto; Kohei Yamanoi; Takayoshi Norimatsu; Shigeki Tokita; Yoshiki Nakata; Junji Kawanaka
A petawatt laser for fast ignition experiments (LFEX) laser system [N. Miyanaga et al., J. Phys. IV France 133, 81 (2006)], which is currently capable of delivering 2u2009kJ in a 1.5 ps pulse using 4 laser beams, has been constructed beside the GEKKO-XII laser facility for demonstrating efficient fast heating of a dense plasma up to the ignition temperature under the auspices of the Fast Ignition Realization EXperiment (FIREX) project [H. Azechi et al., Nucl. Fusion 49, 104024 (2009)]. In the FIREX experiment, a cone is attached to a spherical target containing a fuel to prevent a corona plasma from entering the path of the intense heating LFEX laser beams. The LFEX laser beams are focused at the tip of the cone to generate a relativistic electron beam (REB), which heats a dense fuel core generated by compression of a spherical deuterized plastic target induced by the GEKKO-XII laser beams. Recent studies indicate that the current heating efficiency is only 0.4%, and three requirements to achieve higher efficiency of the fast ignition (FI) scheme with the current GEKKO and LFEX systems have been identified: (i) reduction of the high energy tail of the REB; (ii) formation of a fuel core with high areal density using a limited number (twelve) of GEKKO-XII laser beams as well as a limited energy (4u2009kJ of 0.53-μm light in a 1.3u2009ns pulse); (iii) guiding and focusing of the REB to the fuel core. Laser–plasma interactions in a long-scale plasma generate electrons that are too energetic to efficiently heat the fuel core. Three actions were taken to meet the first requirement. First, the intensity contrast of the foot pulses to the main pulses of the LFEX was improved to >109. Second, a 5.5-mm-long cone was introduced to reduce pre-heating of the inner cone wall caused by illumination of the unconverted 1.053-μm light of implosion beam (GEKKO-XII). Third, the outside of the cone wall was coated with a 40-μm plastic layer to protect it from the pressure caused by imploding plasma. Following the above improvements, conversion of 13% of the LFEX laser energy to a low energy portion of the REB, whose slope temperature is 0.7u2009MeV, which is close to the ponderomotive scaling value, was achieved. To meet the second requirement, the compression of a solid spherical ball with a diameter of 200-μm to form a dense core with an areal density of ∼0.07u2009g/cm2 was induced by a laser-driven spherically converging shock wave. Converging shock compression is more hydrodynamically stable compared to shell implosion, while a hot spot cannot be generated with a solid ball target. Solid ball compression is preferable also for compressing an external magnetic field to collimate the REB to the fuel core, due to the relatively small magnetic Reynolds number of the shock compressed region. To meet the third requirement, we have generated a strong kilo-tesla magnetic field using a laser-driven capacitor-coil target. The strength and time history of the magnetic field were characterized with proton deflectometry and a B-dot probe. Guidance of the REB using a 0.6-kT field in a planar geometry has been demonstrated at the LULI 2000 laser facility. In a realistic FI scenario, a magnetic mirror is formed between the REB generation point and the fuel core. The effects of the strong magnetic field on not only REB transport but also plasma compression were studied using numerical simulations. According to the transport calculations, the heating efficiency can be improved from 0.4% to 4% by the GEKKO and LFEX laser system by meeting the three requirements described above. This efficiency is scalable to 10% of the heating efficiency by increasing the areal density of the fuel core.
Physical Review E | 2017
C. Goyon; B. B. Pollock; D. P. Turnbull; A. Hazi; L. Divol; W. A. Farmer; D. Haberberger; J. Javedani; A. J. Johnson; A. Kemp; M. C. Levy; B. Grant Logan; D. A. Mariscal; O. L. Landen; S. Patankar; J. S. Ross; A. M. Rubenchik; G. F. Swadling; G. J. Williams; S. Fujioka; King Fai Farley Law; John Moody
We report on the detection of the time-dependent B-field amplitude and topology in a laser-driven solenoid. The B-field inferred from both proton deflectometry and Faraday rotation ramps up linearly in time reaching 210 ± 35 T at the end of a 0.75-ns laser drive with 1 TW at 351 nm. A lumped-element circuit model agrees well with the linear rise and suggests that the blow-off plasma screens the field between the plates leading to an increased plate capacitance that converts the laser-generated hot-electron current into a voltage source that drives current through the solenoid. ALE3D modeling shows that target disassembly and current diffusion may limit the B-field increase for longer laser drive. Scaling of these experimental results to a National Ignition Facility (NIF) hohlraum target size (∼0.2cm^{3}) indicates that it is possible to achieve several tens of Tesla.
Physical Review E | 2017
Kazuki Matsuo; Hideo Nagatomo; Zhe Zhang; Philippe Nicolai; Takayoshi Sano; Shohei Sakata; S. Kojima; Seung Ho Lee; King Fai Farley Law; Yasunobu Arikawa; Youichi Sakawa; T. Morita; Yasuhiro Kuramitsu; Shinsuke Fujioka; H. Azechi
Recent progress in the generation in the laboratory of a strong (>100-T) magnetic field enables us to investigate experimentally unexplored magnetohydrodynamics phenomena of a high-energy-density plasma, which an external magnetic field of 200-300 T notably affects due to anisotropic thermal conduction, even when the magnetic field pressure is much lower than the plasma pressure. The external magnetic field reduces electron thermal conduction across the external magnetic field lines because the Larmor radius of the thermal electrons in the external magnetic field is much shorter than the mean free path of the thermal electrons. The velocity of a thin polystyrene foil driven by intense laser beams in the strong external magnetic field is faster than that in the absence of the external magnetic field. Growth of sinusoidal corrugation imposed initially on the laser-driven polystyrene surface is enhanced by the external magnetic field because the plasma pressure distribution becomes nonuniform due to the external magnetic-field structure modulated by the perturbed plasma flow ablated from the corrugated surface.
Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2016
S. Kojima; Yasunobu Arikawa; Alessio Morace; Masayasu Hata; Hideo Nagatomo; T. Ozaki; Shohei Sakata; Seung Ho Lee; Kazuki Matsuo; King Fai Farley Law; Shota Tosaki; Akifumi Yogo; Tomoyuki Johzaki; Atsushi Sunahara; H. Sakagami; M. Nakai; Hiroaki Nishimura; H. Shiraga; Shinsuke Fujioka; H. Azechi
The dependence of high-energy electron generation on the pulse duration of a high intensity LFEX laser was experimentally investigated. The LFEX laser (λ = 1.054 and intensity = 2.5 – 3 x 1018 W/cm2) pulses were focused on a 1 mm3 gold cubic block after reducing the intensities of the foot pulse and pedestal by using a plasma mirror. The full width at half maximum (FWHM) duration of the intense laser pulse could be set to either 1.2 ps or 4 ps by temporally stacking four beams of the LFEX laser, for which the slope temperature of the high-energy electron distribution was 0.7 MeV and 1.4 MeV, respectively. The slope temperature increment cannot be explained without considering pulse duration effects on fast electron generation.
Physics of Plasmas | 2018
J. J. Santos; M. Bailly-Grandvaux; M. Ehret; Alexey Arefiev; D. Batani; F. N. Beg; A. Calisti; S. Ferri; R. Florido; P. Forestier-Colleoni; Shinsuke Fujioka; M. A. Gigosos; L. Giuffrida; L. Gremillet; J.J. Honrubia; S. Kojima; Ph. Korneev; King Fai Farley Law; J.-R. Marquès; Alessio Morace; C. Mossé; O. Peyrusse; S.J. Rose; Markus Roth; Shohei Sakata; G. Schaumann; F. Suzuki-Vidal; V. T. Tikhonchuk; T. Toncian; N. Woolsey
Powerful laser-plasma processes are explored to generate discharge currents of a few
Nature Communications | 2018
Shohei Sakata; Seungho Lee; Hiroki Morita; Tomoyuki Johzaki; H. Sawada; Yuki Iwasa; Kazuki Matsuo; King Fai Farley Law; Akira Yao; Masayasu Hata; Atsushi Sunahara; S. Kojima; Yuki Abe; Hidetaka Kishimoto; Aneez Syuhada; Takashi Shiroto; Alessio Morace; Akifumi Yogo; Natsumi Iwata; M. Nakai; H. Sakagami; T. Ozaki; Kohei Yamanoi; Takayoshi Norimatsu; Yoshiki Nakata; Shigeki Tokita; Noriaki Miyanaga; Junji Kawanaka; H. Shiraga; Kunioki Mima
100,
Jetp Letters | 2018
Y. Abe; King Fai Farley Law; Ph. Korneev; Shinsuke Fujioka; S. Kojima; S.-H. Lee; Shohei Sakata; K. Matsuo; A. Oshima; Alessio Morace; Y. Arikawa; A. Yogo; M. Nakai; T. Norimatsu; E. d’Humières; J. J. Santos; K. Kondo; A. Sunahara; S. A. Gus’kov; V. T. Tikhonchuk
kA in coil targets, yielding magnetostatic fields (B-fields) in excess of
Archive | 2018
Sadaoki Kojima; Masayasu Hata; Natsumi Iwata; Yasunobu Arikawa; Alessio Morace; S. Sakata; Seungho Lee; Kazuki Matsuo; King Fai Farley Law; Hiroki Morita; Yugo Ochiai; Akifumi Yogo; Hideo Nagatomo; T. Ozaki; Tomoyuki Johzaki; Atsushi Sunahara; H. Sakagami; Zhe Zhang; Shota Tosaki; Yuki Abe; Junji Kawanaka; Shigeki Tokita; Mitsuo Nakai; Hiroaki Nishimura; H. Shiraga; Hiroshi Azechi; Yasuhiko Sentoku; Shinsuke Fujioka
0.5,
arXiv: Plasma Physics | 2017
Ph. Korneev; Y. Abe; King Fai Farley Law; S. G. Bochkarev; Shinsuke Fujioka; S. Kojima; S.-H. Lee; Shohei Sakata; K. Matsuo; A. Oshima; Alessio Morace; Y. Arikawa; A. Yogo; M. Nakai; T. Norimatsu; E. d'Humières; J. J. Santos; K. Kondo; A. Sunahara; V. Yu. Bychenkov; S. Gus'kov; V. T. Tikhonchuk
kT. The quasi-static currents are provided from hot electron ejection from the laser-irradiated surface. According to our model, describing qualitatively the evolution of the discharge current, the major control parameter is the laser irradiance