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Dive into the research topics where M. Spaeth is active.

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Featured researches published by M. Spaeth.


Applied Optics | 2007

National Ignition Facility laser performance status

C. A. Haynam; Paul J. Wegner; Jerome M. Auerbach; M. W. Bowers; S. Dixit; G. V. Erbert; G. M. Heestand; Mark A. Henesian; Mark Hermann; Kenneth S. Jancaitis; Kenneth R. Manes; Christopher D. Marshall; N. C. Mehta; Joseph A. Menapace; E. I. Moses; J. R. Murray; M. Nostrand; Charles D. Orth; R. Patterson; Richard A. Sacks; M. J. Shaw; M. Spaeth; S. Sutton; Wade H. Williams; C. Clay Widmayer; R. K. White; Steven T. Yang; B. Van Wonterghem

The National Ignition Facility (NIF) is the worlds largest laser system. It contains a 192 beam neodymium glass laser that is designed to deliver 1.8 MJ at 500 TW at 351 nm in order to achieve energy gain (ignition) in a deuterium-tritium nuclear fusion target. To meet this goal, laser design criteria include the ability to generate pulses of up to 1.8 MJ total energy, with peak power of 500 TW and temporal pulse shapes spanning 2 orders of magnitude at the third harmonic (351 nm or 3omega) of the laser wavelength. The focal-spot fluence distribution of these pulses is carefully controlled, through a combination of special optics in the 1omega (1053 nm) portion of the laser (continuous phase plates), smoothing by spectral dispersion, and the overlapping of multiple beams with orthogonal polarization (polarization smoothing). We report performance qualification tests of the first eight beams of the NIF laser. Measurements are reported at both 1omega and 3omega, both with and without focal-spot conditioning. When scaled to full 192 beam operation, these results demonstrate, to the best of our knowledge for the first time, that the NIF will meet its laser performance design criteria, and that the NIF can simultaneously meet the temporal pulse shaping, focal-spot conditioning, and peak power requirements for two candidate indirect drive ignition designs.


Nuclear Fusion | 2004

An overview of LLNL high-energy short-pulse technology for advanced radiography of laser fusion experiments

C. P. J. Barty; M.H. Key; J.A. Britten; R. Beach; G. Beer; C. Brown; S. Bryan; John A. Caird; T. Carlson; John K. Crane; Jay W. Dawson; Alvin C. Erlandson; D. N. Fittinghoff; Mark Hermann; C. Hoaglan; A. Iyer; L. Jones; Igor Jovanovic; Aleksey M. Komashko; O. L. Landen; Zhi M. Liao; William A. Molander; S. Mitchell; E. I. Moses; Norman D. Nielsen; H.-H. Nguyen; J. Nissen; Stephen A. Payne; Deanna M. Pennington; L. Risinger

The technical challenges and motivations for high-energy, short-pulse generation with the National Ignition Facility (NIF) and possibly other large-scale Nd : glass lasers are reviewed. High-energy short-pulse generation (multi-kilojoule, picosecond pulses) will be possible via the adaptation of chirped pulse amplification laser techniques on NIF. Development of metre-scale, high-efficiency, high-damage-threshold final optics is a key technical challenge. In addition, deployment of high energy petawatt (HEPW) pulses on NIF is constrained by existing laser infrastructure and requires new, compact compressor designs and short-pulse, fibre-based, seed-laser systems. The key motivations for HEPW pulses on NIF is briefly outlined and includes high-energy, x-ray radiography, proton beam radiography, proton isochoric heating and tests of the fast ignitor concept for inertial confinement fusion.


Optical Engineering | 2004

National Ignition Facility wavefront requirements and optical architecture

M. Spaeth; Kenneth R. Manes; C. Widmayer; Wade H. Williams; Pamela K. Whitman; Mark A. Henesian; Irving F. Stowers; John Honig

With the first four of its eventual 192 beams now executing shots, the National Ignition Facility (NIF) at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is already the worlds largest and most energetic laser. The optical system performance requirements that are in place for NIF are derived from the goals of the missions it is designed to serve. These missions include inertial confinement fusion (ICF) research and the study of matter at extreme energy densities and pressures. These mission requirements have led to a design strategy for achieving high quality focusable energy and power from the laser and to specifications on optics that are important for an ICF laser. The design of NIF utilizes a multipass architecture with a single large amplifier type that provides high gain, high extraction efficiency and high packing density. We have taken a systems engineering approach to the practical implementation of this design that specifies the wavefront parameters of individual optics in order to achieve the desired cumulative performance of the laser beamline. This presentation provides a detailed look at the causes and effects of performance degradation in large laser systems and how NIF has been designed to overcome these effects. We will also present results of spot size performance measurements that have validated many of the early design decisions that have been incorporated in the NIF laser architecture.


Fusion Science and Technology | 2011

Compact, Efficient Laser Systems Required for Laser Inertial Fusion Energy

A. Bayramian; S. Aceves; T. Anklam; K. Baker; E. Bliss; C. Boley; A. Bullington; John A. Caird; D. Chen; R. Deri; Mike Dunne; Alvin C. Erlandson; D. Flowers; Mark A. Henesian; Jeffery F. Latkowski; Kenneth R. Manes; William A. Molander; E. I. Moses; T. Piggott; S. Powers; S. Rana; S. Rodriguez; R. Sawicki; Kathleen I. Schaffers; L. Seppala; M. Spaeth; S. Sutton; S. Telford

Abstract This paper presents our conceptual design for laser drivers used in Laser Inertial Fusion Energy (LIFE) power plants. Although we have used only modest extensions of existing laser technology to ensure near-term feasibility, predicted performance meets or exceeds plant requirements: 2.2 MJ pulse energy produced by 384 beamlines at 16 Hz, with 18% wall-plug efficiency. High reliability and maintainability are achieved by mounting components in compact line-replaceable units that can be removed and replaced rapidly while other beamlines continue to operate, at up to ˜13% above normal energy, to compensate for neighboring beamlines that have failed. Statistical modeling predicts that laser-system availability can be greater than 99% provided that components meet reasonable mean-time-between-failure specifications.


Optical Materials Express | 2011

Comparison of Nd:phosphate glass, Yb:YAG and Yb:S-FAP laser beamlines for laser inertial fusion energy (LIFE) [Invited]

Alvin C. Erlandson; S. Aceves; A. Bayramian; Amber L. Bullington; Raymond J. Beach; C. D. Boley; John A. Caird; Robert J. Deri; A. M. Dunne; D. Flowers; Mark A. Henesian; Kenneth R. Manes; E. I. Moses; S. Rana; Kathleen I. Schaffers; M. Spaeth; C. J. Stolz; S. J. Telford

We present the results of performance modeling of diode-pumped solid state laser beamlines designed for use in Laser Inertial Fusion Energy (LIFE) power plants. Our modeling quantifies the efficiency increases that can be obtained by increasing peak diode power and reducing pump-pulse duration, to reduce decay losses. At the same efficiency, beamlines that use laser slabs of Yb:YAG or Yb:S-FAP require lower diode power than beamlines that use laser slabs of Nd:phosphate glass, since Yb:YAG and Yb:S-FAP have longer storage lifetimes. Beamlines using Yb:YAG attain their highest efficiency at a temperature of about 200K. Beamlines using Nd:phosphate glass or Yb:S-FAP attain high efficiency at or near room temperature.


Fusion Science and Technology | 2011

Timely Delivery of Laser Inertial Fusion Energy (LIFE)

Mike Dunne; E. I. Moses; Peter A. Amendt; Thomas M. Anklam; A. Bayramian; E. Bliss; B. Debs; R. Deri; T. Diaz de la Rubia; Bassem S. El-Dasher; Joseph C. Farmer; D. Flowers; Kevin J. Kramer; L. Lagin; J.F. Latkowski; J. D. Lindl; Wayne R. Meier; Robin Miles; Gregory A. Moses; S. Reyes; V. Roberts; R. Sawicki; M. Spaeth; E. Storm

Abstract The National Ignition Facility (NIF), the world’s largest and most energetic laser system, is now operational at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. A key goal of the NIF is to demonstrate fusion ignition for the first time in the laboratory. Its flexibility allows multiple target designs (both indirect and direct drive) to be fielded, offering substantial scope for optimization of a robust target design. In this paper we discuss an approach to generating gigawatt levels of electrical power from a laser-driven source of fusion neutrons based on these demonstration experiments. This “LIFE” concept enables rapid time-to-market for a commercial power plant, assuming success with ignition and a technology demonstration program that links directly to a facility design and construction project. The LIFE design makes use of recent advances in diode-pumped, solid-state laser technology. It adopts the paradigm of Line Replaceable Units utilized on the NIF to provide high levels of availability and maintainability and mitigate the need for advanced materials development. A demonstration LIFE plant based on these design principles is described, along with the areas of technology development required prior to plant construction.


Boulder Damage Symposium XXXIX: Annual Symposium on Optical Materials for High Power Lasers | 2007

Growth of laser damage in fused silica: diameter to depth ratio

Mary A. Norton; John J. Adams; C. Wren Carr; Eugene E. Donohue; Michael D. Feit; Richard P. Hackel; William G. Hollingsworth; J. Jarboe; Manyalibo J. Matthews; Alexander M. Rubenchik; M. Spaeth

Growth of laser initiated damage plays a major role in determining optics lifetime in high power laser systems. Previous measurements have established that the lateral diameter grows exponentially. Knowledge of the growth of the site in the propagation direction is also important, especially so when considering techniques designed to mitigate damage growth, where it is required to reach all the subsurface damage. In this work, we present data on both the diameter and the depth of a growing exit surface damage sites in fused silica. Measured growth rates with both 351 nm illumination and with combined 351 nm and 1054 nm illumination are discussed.


Boulder Damage Symposium XXXVIII: Annual Symposium on Optical Materials for High Power Lasers | 2006

The effect of laser pulse duration on laser-induced damage in KDP and SiO2

Christopher W. Carr; Manyalibo J. Matthews; J. D. Bude; M. Spaeth

We examine the effect of pulse duration on both density and morphology of laser-induced damage in KDP and SiO2. In both materials the density of damage sites scales with pulse duration to the ~ 0.4 power for 351-nm pulses between 1 and 10 ns. In SiO2 three types of damage sites are observed. The sizes of the largest of these sites as well as the size of KDP damage sites scale approximately linearly with pulse duration. Similarities of damage in very different materials points to properties of laser-induced damage which are material independent and give insight to the underlying physics of laser-induced damage.


Boulder Damage Symposium XXXVII: Annual Symposium on Optical Materials for High Power Lasers | 2005

Growth of laser damage in SiO2 under multiple wavelength irradiation

Mary A. Norton; Eugene E. Donohue; Michael D. Feit; Richard P. Hackel; William G. Hollingsworth; Alexander M. Rubenchik; M. Spaeth

In laser systems using frequency conversion, multiple wavelengths will be present on optical components. We have investigated the growth of laser initiated damage in fused silica in the presence of multiple wavelengths. In particular, we measured growth at 351 nm in the presence of 1053 nm near the threshold of growth for 351 nm alone. The data shows that the sum fluence determines the onset of growth as well as the growth rate. The measured growth coefficient is consistent with all the energy being delivered at 351 nm. Additionally, we measured growth at 527 nm in the presence of 1053 nm near the threshold of growth at 527 nm alone. In this case, the sum fluence also determines the growth coefficient but the rate is consistent with all the energy being delivered at 1053 nm. We present the measurements and discuss possible reasons for the behavior.


Fusion Science and Technology | 2016

Damage mechanisms avoided or managed for NIF large optics

Kenneth R. Manes; M. Spaeth; J. J. Adams; M. W. Bowers; J. D. Bude; C. W. Carr; A. D. Conder; D. A. Cross; S. G. Demos; J. M. Di Nicola; S. Dixit; Eyal Feigenbaum; R. G. Finucane; Gabe Guss; Mark A. Henesian; J. Honig; D. H. Kalantar; L. M. Kegelmeyer; Z. M. Liao; B. J. MacGowan; M. J. Matthews; K. P. McCandless; N. C. Mehta; Philip E. Miller; Raluca A. Negres; M. A. Norton; Mike C. Nostrand; Charles D. Orth; Richard A. Sacks; M. J. Shaw

Abstract After every other failure mode has been considered, in the end, the high-performance limit of all lasers is set by optical damage. The demands of inertial confinement fusion (ICF) pushed lasers designed as ICF drivers into this limit from their very earliest days. The first ICF lasers were small, and their pulses were short. Their goal was to provide as much power to the target as possible. Typically, they faced damage due to high intensity on their optics. As requests for higher laser energy, longer pulse lengths, and better symmetry appeared, new kinds of damage also emerged, some of them anticipated and others unexpected. This paper will discuss the various types of damage to large optics that had to be considered, avoided to the extent possible, or otherwise managed as the National Ignition Facility (NIF) laser was designed, fabricated, and brought into operation. It has been possible for NIF to meet its requirements because of the experience gained in previous ICF systems and because NIF designers have continued to be able to avoid or manage new damage situations as they have appeared.

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Kenneth R. Manes

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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E. I. Moses

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Paul J. Wegner

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Alvin C. Erlandson

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Mark A. Henesian

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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B. J. MacGowan

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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S. Sutton

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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C. A. Haynam

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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John A. Caird

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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M. W. Bowers

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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