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Dive into the research topics where L. Yin is active.

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Featured researches published by L. Yin.


Physics of Plasmas | 2007

Monoenergetic and GeV ion acceleration from the laser breakout afterburner using ultrathin targets

L. Yin; B. J. Albright; B. M. Hegelich; K. J. Bowers; K. A. Flippo; Thomas J. T. Kwan; Juan C. Fernandez

A new laser-driven ion acceleration mechanism using ultrathin targets has been identified from particle-in-cell simulations. After a brief period of target normal sheath acceleration (TNSA) [S. P. Hatchett et al., Phys. Plasmas 7, 2076 (2000)], two distinct stages follow: first, a period of enhanced TNSA during which the cold electron background converts entirely to hot electrons, and second, the “laser breakout afterburner” (BOA) when the laser penetrates to the rear of the target where a localized longitudinal electric field is generated with the location of the peak field co-moving with the ions. During this process, a relativistic electron beam is produced by the ponderomotive drive of the laser. This beam is unstable to a relativistic Buneman instability, which rapidly converts the electron energy into ion energy. This mechanism accelerates ions to much higher energies using laser intensities comparable to earlier TNSA experiments. At a laser intensity of 1021W∕cm2, the carbon ions accelerate as a qu...


Physics of Plasmas | 2008

Ultrahigh performance three-dimensional electromagnetic relativistic kinetic plasma simulation

K. J. Bowers; B. J. Albright; L. Yin; B. Bergen; Thomas J. T. Kwan

The algorithms, implementation details, and applications of VPIC, a state-of-the-art first principles 3D electromagnetic relativistic kinetic particle-in-cell code, are discussed. Unlike most codes, VPIC is designed to minimize data motion, as, due to physical limitations (including the speed of light!), moving data between and even within modern microprocessors is more time consuming than performing computations. As a result, VPIC has achieved unprecedented levels of performance. For example, VPIC can perform ∼0.17 billion cold particles pushed and charge conserving accumulated per second per processor on IBM’s Cell microprocessor—equivalent to sustaining Los Alamos’s planned Roadrunner supercomputer at ∼0.56 petaflop (quadrillion floating point operations per second). VPIC has enabled previously intractable simulations in numerous areas of plasma physics, including magnetic reconnection and laser plasma interactions; next generation supercomputers like Roadrunner will enable further advances.


Laser and Particle Beams | 2007

Laser-driven ion accelerators: Spectral control, monoenergetic ions and new acceleration mechanisms

K. A. Flippo; B. M. Hegelich; B. J. Albright; L. Yin; D. C. Gautier; S. Letzring; M. Schollmeier; J. Schreiber; R. Schulze; Juan C. Fernandez

LosAlamos National Laboratory short pulse experiments have shown using various target cleaning techniques such that heavy ion beams of different charge states can be produced. Furthermore, by controlling the thickness of light ions on the rear of the target, monoenergetic ion pulses can be generated. The spectral shape of the accelerated particles can be controlled to yield a range of distributions, from Maxwellian to ones possessing a monoenergetic peak at high energy. The key lies in understanding and utilizing target surface chemistry. Careful monitoring and control of the surface properties and induction of reactions at different temperatures allows well defined source layers to be formed, which in turn lead to the desired energy spectra in the acceleration process. Theoretical considerations provide understanding of the process of monoenergetic ion production. In addition, numerical modeling has identified a new acceleration mechanism, the laser break-out afterburner that could potentially boost particle energies by up to two orders of magnitude for the same laser parameters. This mechanism may enable application of laser-accelerated ion beams to venues such as compact accelerators, tumor therapy, and ion fast ignition.


Physics of Plasmas | 2007

Relativistic Buneman instability in the laser breakout afterburner

B. J. Albright; L. Yin; K. J. Bowers; B. M. Hegelich; K. A. Flippo; Thomas J. T. Kwan; Juan C. Fernandez

A new laser-driven ion acceleration mechanism has been identified in particle-in-cell simulations of high-contrast-ratio ultraintense lasers with very thin (10s of nm) solid targets [Yin et al., Laser and Particle Beams 24, 291 (2006); Yin et al., Phys. Plasmas 13, 072701 (2007)]. After a brief period of target normal sheath acceleration (TNSA), “enhanced” TNSA follows. In this stage, the laser rapidly heats all the electrons in the target as the target thickness becomes comparable to the skin depth and enhanced acceleration of the ions results. Then, concomitant with the laser penetrating the target, a large accelerating longitudinal electric field is generated that co-moves with the ions. This last phase has been termed the laser “breakout afterburner” (BOA). Earlier work suggested that the BOA was associated with the Buneman instability that efficiently converts energy from the drift of the electrons into the ions. In this Brief Communication, this conjecture is found to be consistent with particle-in-...


Physics of Plasmas | 2009

Influence of Coulomb collisions on the structure of reconnection layers

William Daughton; V. Roytershteyn; B. J. Albright; Homa Karimabadi; L. Yin; K. J. Bowers

The influence of Coulomb collisions on the structure of reconnection layers is examined in neutral sheet geometry using fully kinetic simulations with a Monte Carlo treatment of the Fokker–Planck operator. The algorithm is first carefully benchmarked against key predictions from transport theory, including the parallel and perpendicular resistivities as well as the thermal force. The results demonstrate that the collisionality is accurately specified, thus allowing the initial Lundquist number to be chosen as desired. For modest Lundquist numbers S≲1000, the classic Sweet–Parker solution is recovered. Furthermore, a distinct transition to a faster kinetic regime is observed when the thickness of the resistive layer δSP falls below the ion inertial length di. For higher Lundquist numbers S≳1000, plasmoids (secondary islands) are observed within the elongated resistive layers. These plasmoids give rise to a measurable increase in the reconnection rate and for certain cases induce a transition to kinetic reg...


Physics of Plasmas | 2006

Different kλD regimes for nonlinear effects on Langmuir wavesa)

J. L. Kline; D. S. Montgomery; L. Yin; D. F. DuBois; B. J. Albright; B. Bezzerides; J. A. Cobble; E.S. Dodd; Juan C. Fernandez; R. P. Johnson; J. M. Kindel; Harvey A. Rose; H. X. Vu; William Daughton

As Langmuir waves (LWs) are driven to large amplitude in plasma, they are affected by nonlinear mechanisms. A global understanding, based on simulations and experiments, has emerged that identifies various nonlinear regimes depending on the dimensionless parameter kλD, where k is the Langmuir wave number and λD is the electron Debye length. The nonlinear phenomena arise due to wave-wave and wave-particle coupling mechanisms, and this basic separation between fluid-like nonlinearities and kinetic nonlinearities depends on the degree to which electron and ion Landau damping, as well as electron trapping, play a role. Previous ionospheric heating experiments [Cheung et al. Phys. Plasmas 8, 802 (2001)] identified cavitation/collapse and Langmuir decay instability (LDI), predominantly wave-wave mechanisms, to be the principal nonlinear effects for driven LWs with kλD<0.1, in agreement with fluid simulations [DuBois et al. Phys. Plasmas 8, 791 (2001)]. In the present research, collective Thomson scattering meas...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2001

Hybrid and Hall-MHD simulations of collisionless reconnection: Dynamics of the electron pressure tensor

L. Yin; Dan Winske; S. P. Gary; Joachim Birn

In this study we compare the results of two-dimensional hybrid (particle ions, massless fluid electrons) and Hall-MHD simulations of collisionless reconnection in a thin current sheet. Both calculations include the full electron pressure tensor (instead of a localized resistivity) in the generalized Ohms law to initiate reconnection, and in both an initial perturbation to the Harris equilibrium is applied. As in the recent Geospace Environment Modeling (GEM) reconnection challenge studies, we find overall agreement between the two calculations in both the reconnection rate and the global configuration. Results of this study show that in addition to providing the reconnection electric field at the X point the divergence of the electron pressure tensor leads to in-plane electric fields that exert drag forces on the ions as they enter and exit the near-X-point region. The in-plane electric fields are enhanced in regions of small transverse scale along the edge of the sheet, and the resulting narrow electron current layers are demonstrated clearly. The possibility of improving magnetotail reconnection models by embedding a Hall-MHD calculation using the electron pressure tensor model inside a large-scale MHD simulation is suggested.


Nuclear Fusion | 2011

Experimental demonstration of particle energy, conversion efficiency and spectral shape required for ion-based fast ignition

B. M. Hegelich; D. Jung; B. J. Albright; Juan C. Fernandez; D. C. Gautier; Chengkun Huang; Thomas J. T. Kwan; S. Letzring; S. Palaniyappan; R. C. Shah; H.-C. Wu; L. Yin; A. Henig; Rainer Hörlein; Daniel Kiefer; Jörg Schreiber; X.Q. Yan; T. Tajima; D. Habs; B. Dromey; J.J. Honrubia

Research on fusion fast ignition (FI) initiated by laser-driven ion beams has made substantial progress in the last years. Compared with electrons, FI based on a beam of quasi-monoenergetic ions has the advantage of a more localized energy deposition, and stiffer particle transport, bringing the required total beam energy close to the theoretical minimum. Due to short pulse laser drive, the ion beam can easily deliver the 200 TW power required to ignite the compressed D–T fuel. In integrated calculations we recently simulated ion-based FI targets with high fusion gain targets and a proof of principle experiment [1]. These simulations identify three key requirements for the success of ion-driven fast ignition (IFI): (1) the generation of a sufficiently high-energetic ion beam (≈400–500 MeV for C), with (2) less than 20% energy spread at (3) more than 10% conversion efficiency of laser to beam energy. Here we present for the first time new experimental results, demonstrating all three parameters in separate experiments. Using diamond nanotargets and ultrahigh contrast laser pulses we were able to demonstrate >500 MeV carbon ions, as well as carbon pulses with ΔE/E < 20%. The first measurements put the total conversion efficiency of laser light into high energy carbon ions on the order of 10%.


Physics of Plasmas | 2008

Saturation of backward stimulated scattering of laser in kinetic regime : Wavefront bowing, trapped particle modulational instability, and trapped particle self-focusing of plasma waves

L. Yin; B. J. Albright; K. J. Bowers; William Daughton; Harvey A. Rose

Backward stimulated Raman and Brillouin scattering (SRS and SBS) of laser are examined in the kinetic regime using particle-in-cell simulations. The SRS reflectivity measured as a function of the laser intensity in a single hot spot from two-dimensional (2D) simulations shows a sharp onset at a threshold laser intensity and a saturated level at higher intensities, as obtained previously in Trident experiments [D. S. Montgomery et al., Phys. Plasmas 9, 2311 (2002)]. In these simulations, wavefront bowing of electron plasma waves (ion acoustic waves) due to the trapped particle nonlinear frequency shift, which increases with laser intensity, is observed in the SRS (SBS) regime for the first time. Self-focusing from trapped particle modulational instability (TPMI) [H. A. Rose, Phys. Plasmas 12, 12318 (2005)] is shown to occur in both two- and three-dimensional SRS simulations. The key physics underlying nonlinear saturation of SRS is identified as a combination of wavefront bowing, TPMI, and self-focusing of...


Physics of Plasmas | 2011

Break-out afterburner ion acceleration in the longer laser pulse length regime

L. Yin; B. J. Albright; D. Jung; R. C. Shah; S. Palaniyappan; K. J. Bowers; A. Henig; J. C. Fern´ndez; B. M. Hegelich

Kinetic simulations of break-out-afterburner (BOA) ion acceleration from nm-scale targets are examined in a longer pulse length regime than studied previously. It is shown that when the target becomes relativistically transparent to the laser, an epoch of dramatic acceleration of ions occurs that lasts until the electron density in the expanding target reduces to the critical density in the non-relativistic limit. For given laser parameters, the optimal target thickness yielding the highest maximum ion energy is one in which this time window for ion acceleration overlaps with the intensity peak of the laser pulse. A simple analytic model of relativistically induced transparency is presented for plasma expansion at the time-evolving sound speed, from which these times may be estimated. The maximum ion energy attainable is controlled by the finite acceleration volume and time over which the BOA acts.

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B. J. Albright

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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K. J. Bowers

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Juan C. Fernandez

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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B. M. Hegelich

University of Texas at Austin

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Harvey A. Rose

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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J. L. Kline

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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D. S. Montgomery

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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William Daughton

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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K. A. Flippo

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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