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Featured researches published by M. J. Eckart.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Neutron spectrometry--an essential tool for diagnosing implosions at the National Ignition Facility (invited).

M. Gatu Johnson; J. A. Frenje; D. T. Casey; C. K. Li; F. H. Séguin; R. D. Petrasso; R. C. Ashabranner; R. Bionta; D. L. Bleuel; E. Bond; J. A. Caggiano; A. Carpenter; C. Cerjan; T. J. Clancy; T. Doeppner; M. J. Eckart; M. J. Edwards; S. Friedrich; S. H. Glenzer; S. W. Haan; Edward P. Hartouni; R. Hatarik; S. P. Hatchett; O. S. Jones; G. A. Kyrala; S. Le Pape; R. A. Lerche; O. L. Landen; T. Ma; A. J. Mackinnon

DT neutron yield (Y(n)), ion temperature (T(i)), and down-scatter ratio (dsr) determined from measured neutron spectra are essential metrics for diagnosing the performance of inertial confinement fusion (ICF) implosions at the National Ignition Facility (NIF). A suite of neutron-time-of-flight (nTOF) spectrometers and a magnetic recoil spectrometer (MRS) have been implemented in different locations around the NIF target chamber, providing good implosion coverage and the complementarity required for reliable measurements of Y(n), T(i), and dsr. From the measured dsr value, an areal density (ρR) is determined through the relationship ρR(tot) (g∕cm(2)) = (20.4 ± 0.6) × dsr(10-12 MeV). The proportionality constant is determined considering implosion geometry, neutron attenuation, and energy range used for the dsr measurement. To ensure high accuracy in the measurements, a series of commissioning experiments using exploding pushers have been used for in situ calibration of the as-built spectrometers, which are now performing to the required accuracy. Recent data obtained with the MRS and nTOFs indicate that the implosion performance of cryogenically layered DT implosions, characterized by the experimental ignition threshold factor (ITFx), which is a function of dsr (or fuel ρR) and Y(n), has improved almost two orders of magnitude since the first shot in September, 2010.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010

The National Ignition Facility neutron time-of-flight system and its initial performance (invited)a)

V. Yu. Glebov; T. C. Sangster; C. Stoeckl; J. P. Knauer; W. Theobald; K. L. Marshall; M. J. Shoup; T. Buczek; M. Cruz; T. Duffy; M. Romanofsky; M. Fox; A. Pruyne; M. J. Moran; R. A. Lerche; J. M. McNaney; J. D. Kilkenny; M. J. Eckart; D. Schneider; D. H. Munro; W. Stoeffl; R. Zacharias; J. J. Haslam; T. J. Clancy; M. Yeoman; D. Warwas; C. J. Horsfield; J. L. Bourgade; O. Landoas; L. Disdier

The National Ignition Facility (NIF) successfully completed its first inertial confinement fusion (ICF) campaign in 2009. A neutron time-of-flight (nTOF) system was part of the nuclear diagnostics used in this campaign. The nTOF technique has been used for decades on ICF facilities to infer the ion temperature of hot deuterium (D(2)) and deuterium-tritium (DT) plasmas based on the temporal Doppler broadening of the primary neutron peak. Once calibrated for absolute neutron sensitivity, the nTOF detectors can be used to measure the yield with high accuracy. The NIF nTOF system is designed to measure neutron yield and ion temperature over 11 orders of magnitude (from 10(8) to 10(19)), neutron bang time in DT implosions between 10(12) and 10(16), and to infer areal density for DT yields above 10(12). During the 2009 campaign, the three most sensitive neutron time-of-flight detectors were installed and used to measure the primary neutron yield and ion temperature from 25 high-convergence implosions using D(2) fuel. The OMEGA yield calibration of these detectors was successfully transferred to the NIF.


Nuclear Fusion | 2013

Diagnosing implosion performance at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) by means of neutron spectrometry

J. A. Frenje; R. Bionta; E. Bond; J. A. Caggiano; D. T. Casey; Charles Cerjan; J. Edwards; M. J. Eckart; D. N. Fittinghoff; S. Friedrich; V. Yu. Glebov; S. H. Glenzer; Gary P. Grim; S. W. Haan; R. Hatarik; S. P. Hatchett; M. Gatu Johnson; O. S. Jones; J. D. Kilkenny; J. P. Knauer; O. L. Landen; R. J. Leeper; S. Le Pape; R. A. Lerche; C. K. Li; A. J. Mackinnon; J. M. McNaney; F. E. Merrill; M. J. Moran; David H. Munro

The neutron spectrum from a cryogenically layered deuterium?tritium (dt) implosion at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) provides essential information about the implosion performance. From the measured primary-neutron spectrum (13?15?MeV), yield (Yn) and hot-spot ion temperature (Ti) are determined. From the scattered neutron yield (10?12?MeV) relative to Yn, the down-scatter ratio, and the fuel areal density (?R) are determined. These implosion parameters have been diagnosed to an unprecedented accuracy with a suite of neutron-time-of-flight spectrometers and a magnetic recoil spectrometer implemented in various locations around the NIF target chamber. This provides good implosion coverage and excellent measurement complementarity required for reliable measurements of Yn, Ti and ?R, in addition to ?R asymmetries. The data indicate that the implosion performance, characterized by the experimental ignition threshold factor, has improved almost two orders of magnitude since the first shot taken in September 2010. ?R values greater than 1?g?cm?2 are readily achieved. Three-dimensional semi-analytical modelling and numerical simulations of the neutron-spectrometry data, as well as other data for the hot spot and main fuel, indicate that a maximum hot-spot pressure of ?150?Gbar has been obtained, which is almost a factor of two from the conditions required for ignition according to simulations. Observed Yn are also 3?10 times lower than predicted. The conjecture is that the observed pressure and Yn deficits are partly explained by substantial low-mode ?R asymmetries, which may cause inefficient conversion of shell kinetic energy to hot-spot thermal energy at stagnation.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Cryogenic tritium-hydrogen-deuterium and deuterium-tritium layer implosions with high density carbon ablators in near-vacuum hohlraums

N. B. Meezan; L. Berzak Hopkins; S. Le Pape; L. Divol; A. J. Mackinnon; T. Döppner; D. Ho; O. S. Jones; S. F. Khan; T. Ma; J. L. Milovich; A. Pak; J. S. Ross; C. A. Thomas; L.R. Benedetti; D. K. Bradley; Peter M. Celliers; D. S. Clark; J. E. Field; S. W. Haan; N. Izumi; G. A. Kyrala; J. D. Moody; P. K. Patel; J. E. Ralph; J. R. Rygg; S. M. Sepke; B. K. Spears; R. Tommasini; R. P. J. Town

High Density Carbon (or diamond) is a promising ablator material for use in near-vacuum hohlraums, as its high density allows for ignition designs with laser pulse durations of <10 ns. A series of Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) experiments in 2013 on the National Ignition Facility [Moses et al., Phys. Plasmas 16, 041006 (2009)] culminated in a deuterium-tritium (DT) layered implosion driven by a 6.8 ns, 2-shock laser pulse. This paper describes these experiments and comparisons with ICF design code simulations. Backlit radiography of a tritium-hydrogen-deuterium (THD) layered capsule demonstrated an ablator implosion velocity of 385 km/s with a slightly oblate hot spot shape. Other diagnostics suggested an asymmetric compressed fuel layer. A streak camera-based hot spot self-emission diagnostic (SPIDER) showed a double-peaked history of the capsule self-emission. Simulations suggest that this is a signature of low quality hot spot formation. Changes to the laser pulse and pointing for a subsequent DT i...


Journal of Applied Physics | 2015

Analysis of the neutron time-of-flight spectra from inertial confinement fusion experiments

R. Hatarik; D. B. Sayre; J. A. Caggiano; T. G. Phillips; M. J. Eckart; E. Bond; C. Cerjan; G. P. Grim; Edward P. Hartouni; J. P. Knauer; J. M. McNaney; D. H. Munro

Neutron time-of-flight diagnostics have long been used to characterize the neutron spectrum produced by inertial confinement fusion experiments. The primary diagnostic goals are to extract the d + t → n + α (DT) and d + d → n + 3He (DD) neutron yields and peak widths, and the amount DT scattering relative to its unscattered yield, also known as the down-scatter ratio (DSR). These quantities are used to infer yield weighted plasma conditions, such as ion temperature (Tion) and cold fuel areal density. We report on novel methodologies used to determine neutron yield, apparent Tion, and DSR. These methods invoke a single temperature, static fluid model to describe the neutron peaks from DD and DT reactions and a spline description of the DT spectrum to determine the DSR. Both measurements are performed using a forward modeling technique that includes corrections for line-of-sight attenuation and impulse response of the detection system. These methods produce typical uncertainties for DT Tion of 250 eV, 7% fo...


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010

National Ignition Facility neutron time-of-flight measurements (invited).

R. A. Lerche; V. Yu. Glebov; M. J. Moran; J. McNaney; J. D. Kilkenny; M. J. Eckart; R. A. Zacharias; J. J. Haslam; T. J. Clancy; M. Yeoman; D. Warwas; T. C. Sangster; C. Stoeckl; J. P. Knauer; C. J. Horsfield

The first 3 of 18 neutron time-of-flight (nTOF) channels have been installed at the National Ignition Facility (NIF). The role of these detectors includes yield, temperature, and bang time measurements. This article focuses on nTOF data analysis and quality of results obtained for the first set of experiments to use all 192 NIF beams. Targets produced up to 2×10(10) 2.45 MeV neutrons for initial testing of the nTOF detectors. Differences in neutron scattering at the OMEGA laser facility where the detectors were calibrated and at NIF result in different response functions at the two facilities. Monte Carlo modeling shows this difference. The nTOF performance on these early experiments indicates that the nTOF system with its full complement of detectors should perform well in future measurements of yield, temperature, and bang time.


Physical Review E | 2016

Indications of flow near maximum compression in layered deuterium-tritium implosions at the National Ignition Facility.

M. Gatu Johnson; J. P. Knauer; C. Cerjan; M. J. Eckart; G. P. Grim; Edward P. Hartouni; R. Hatarik; J. D. Kilkenny; D. H. Munro; D. B. Sayre; B. K. Spears; R. Bionta; E. Bond; J. A. Caggiano; D. A. Callahan; D. T. Casey; T. Döppner; J. A. Frenje; V. Yu. Glebov; O. A. Hurricane; A. L. Kritcher; S. LePape; T. Ma; A. J. Mackinnon; N. B. Meezan; P. K. Patel; R. D. Petrasso; J. E. Ralph; P. T. Springer; C. B. Yeamans

An accurate understanding of burn dynamics in implosions of cryogenically layered deuterium (D) and tritium (T) filled capsules, obtained partly through precision diagnosis of these experiments, is essential for assessing the impediments to achieving ignition at the National Ignition Facility. We present measurements of neutrons from such implosions. The apparent ion temperatures T_{ion} are inferred from the variance of the primary neutron spectrum. Consistently higher DT than DD T_{ion} are observed and the difference is seen to increase with increasing apparent DT T_{ion}. The line-of-sight rms variations of both DD and DT T_{ion} are small, ∼150eV, indicating an isotropic source. The DD neutron yields are consistently high relative to the DT neutron yields given the observed T_{ion}. Spatial and temporal variations of the DT temperature and density, DD-DT differential attenuation in the surrounding DT fuel, and fluid motion variations contribute to a DT T_{ion} greater than the DD T_{ion}, but are in a one-dimensional model insufficient to explain the data. We hypothesize that in a three-dimensional interpretation, these effects combined could explain the results.


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Experimental results of radiation-driven, layered deuterium-tritium implosions with adiabat-shaped drives at the National Ignition Facility

V. A. Smalyuk; H. F. Robey; T. Döppner; D. T. Casey; D. S. Clark; O. S. Jones; J. L. Milovich; J. L. Peterson; B. Bachmann; K. L. Baker; L. R. Benedetti; L. Berzak Hopkins; R. Bionta; E. Bond; D. K. Bradley; D. A. Callahan; Peter M. Celliers; C. Cerjan; K. C. Chen; C. Goyon; G. P. Grim; S. Dixit; M. J. Eckart; M. J. Edwards; M. Farrell; D. N. Fittinghoff; J. A. Frenje; M. Gatu-Johnson; N. Gharibyan; S. W. Haan

Radiation-driven, layered deuterium-tritium (DT) implosions were carried out using 3-shock and 4-shock “adiabat-shaped” drives and plastic ablators on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [E. M. Campbell et al., AIP Conf. Proc. 429, 3 (1998)]. The purpose of these shots was to gain further understanding on the relative performance of the low-foot implosions of the National Ignition Campaign [M. J. Edwards et al., Phys. Plasmas 20, 070501 (2013)] versus the subsequent high-foot implosions [T. Doppner et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 115, 055001 (2015)]. The neutron yield performance in the experiment with the 4-shock adiabat-shaped drive was improved by factors ∼3 to ∼10, compared to five companion low-foot shots despite large low-mode asymmetries of DT fuel, while measured compression was similar to its low-foot companions. This indicated that the dominant degradation source for low-foot implosions was ablation-front instability growth, since adiabat shaping significantly stabilized this growth. For the experiment with the low-power 3-shock adiabat-shaped drive, the DT fuel compression was significantly increased, by ∼25% to ∼36%, compared to its companion high-foot implosions. The neutron yield increased by ∼20%, lower than the increase of ∼50% estimated from one-dimensional scaling, suggesting the importance of residual instabilities and asymmetries. For the experiment with the high-power, 3-shock adiabat-shaped drive, the DT fuel compression was slightly increased by ∼14% compared to its companion high-foot experiments. However, the compression was reduced compared to the lower-power 3-shock adiabat-shaped drive, correlated with the increase of hot electrons that hypothetically can be responsible for reduced compression in high-power adiabat-shaped experiments as well as in high-foot experiments. The total neutron yield in the high-power 3-shock adiabat-shaped shot N150416 was 8.5 × 1015 ± 0.2 × 1015, with the fuel areal density of 0.90 ± 0.07 g/cm2, corresponding to the ignition threshold factor parameter IFTX (calculated without alpha heating) of 0.34 ± 0.03 and the yield amplification due to the alpha heating of 2.4 ± 0.2. The performance parameters were among the highest of all shots on NIF and the closest to ignition at this time, based on the IFTX metric. The follow-up experiments were proposed to continue testing physics hypotheses, to measure implosion reproducibility, and to improve quantitative understanding on present implosion results.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Engineering architecture of the neutron Time-of-Flight (nToF) diagnostic suite at the National Ignition Facility

T. J. Clancy; J. Caggiano; J. M. McNaney; M. J. Eckart; M. J. Moran; Vladimir Yu. Glebov; J. P. Knauer; R. Hatarik; S. Friedrich; Richard A. Zacharias; A. C. Carpenter; M. J. Shoup; T. Buczek; M. Yeoman; Z. Zeid; Natalia P. Zaitseva; B. Talison; J. Worden; B. Rice; T. Duffy; A. Pruyne; Kenneth L. Marshall

This paper describes the engineering architecture and function of the neutron Time-of-Flight (nToF) diagnostic suite installed on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). These instruments provide key measures of neutron yield, ion temperature, drift velocity, neutron bang-time, and neutron downscatter ratio. Currently, there are five nToFs on three collimated lines-of-site (LOS) from 18m to 27m from Target Chamber Center, and three positioned 4.5m from TCC, within the NIF Target Chamber but outside the vacuum and confinement boundary by use of re-entrant wells on three other LOS. NIF nToFs measure the time history and equivalent energy spectrum of reaction generated neutrons from a NIF experiment. Neutrons are transduced to electrical signals, which are then carried either by coaxial or Mach-Zehnder transmission systems that feed divider assemblies and fiducially timed digitizing oscilloscopes outside the NIF Target Bay (TB) radiation shield wall. One method of transduction employs a two-stage process wherein a neutron is converted to scintillation photons in hydrogen doped plastic (20x40mm) or bibenzyl crystals (280x1050mm), which are subsequently converted to an electrical signal via a photomultiplier tube or a photo-diode. An alternative approach uses a single-stage conversion of neutrons-to-electrons by use of a thin (0.25 to 2 mm) Chemical Vapor Deposition Diamond (CVDD) disc (2 to 24mm radius) under high voltage bias. In comparison to the scintillator method, CVDDs have fast rise and decay times (


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...

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R. Hatarik

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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J. D. Kilkenny

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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J. P. Knauer

University of Rochester

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D. B. Sayre

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Edward P. Hartouni

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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G. P. Grim

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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D. T. Casey

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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J. A. Caggiano

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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J. A. Frenje

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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