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Dive into the research topics where Max Karasik is active.

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Featured researches published by Max Karasik.


Physics of Plasmas | 2002

Direct observation of mass oscillations due to ablative Richtmyer–Meshkov instability and feedout in planar plastic targets

Y. Aglitskiy; A.L. Velikovich; Max Karasik; V. Serlin; Carl J. Pawley; Andrew J. Schmitt; S. P. Obenschain; A. N. Mostovych; John H. Gardner; Nathan Metzler

Perturbations that seed Rayleigh–Taylor (RT) instability in laser-driven targets form during the early-time period. This time includes a shock wave transit from the front to the rear surface of the target, and a rarefaction wave transit in the opposite direction. During this time interval, areal mass perturbations caused by all sources of nonuniformity (laser imprint, surface ripple) are expected to oscillate. The first direct experimental observations of the areal mass oscillations due to ablative Richtmyer–Meshkov (RM) instability and feedout followed by the RT growth of areal mass modulation are discussed. The experiments were made with 40–99 μm thick planar plastic targets rippled either on the front or on the rear with a sine wave ripple with either 30 or 45 μm wavelength and with 0.5, 1, or 1.5 μm amplitude. Targets were irradiated with 4 ns long Nike KrF laser pulses at ∼50 TW/cm2. The oscillations were observed with our novel diagnostic technique, a monochromatic x-ray imager coupled to a streak c...


Physics of Plasmas | 2002

Effects of Thin High-z Layers on the Hydrodynamics of Laser-Accelerated Plastic Targets

S. P. Obenschain; Denis G. Colombant; Max Karasik; Carl J. Pawley; V. Serlin; Andrew J. Schmitt; J.L. Weaver; John H. Gardner; Lee Phillips; Y. Aglitskiy; Y.-L. Chan; Jill Potkalitsky Dahlburg; M. Klapisch

Experimental results and simulations that study the effects of thin metallic layers with high atomic number (high-Z) on the hydrodynamics of laser accelerated plastic targets are presented. These experiments employ a laser pulse with a low-intensity foot that rises into a high-intensity main pulse. This pulse shape simulates the generic shape needed for high-gain fusion implosions. Imprint of laser nonuniformity during start up of the low intensity foot is a well-known seed for hydrodynamic instability. Large reductions are observed in hydrodynamic instability seeded by laser imprint when certain minimum thickness gold or palladium layers are applied to the laser-illuminated surface of the targets. The experiment indicates that the reduction in imprint is at least as large as that obtained by a 6 times improvement in the laser uniformity. Simulations supported by experiments are presented showing that during the low intensity foot the laser light can be nearly completely absorbed by the high-Z layer. X ra...


Physics of Plasmas | 2010

Acceleration to high velocities and heating by impact using Nike KrF laser

Max Karasik; J.L. Weaver; Y. Aglitskiy; Takeshi Watari; Yasunobu Arikawa; Tatsuhiro Sakaiya; J. Oh; A. L. Velikovich; Steven T. Zalesak; J.W. Bates; S. P. Obenschain; Andrew J. Schmitt; M. Murakami; H. Azechi

The Nike krypton fluoride laser [S. P. Obenschain, S. E. Bodner, D. Colombant, et al., Phys. Plasmas 3, 2098 (1996)] is used to accelerate planar plastic foils to velocities that for the first time reach 1000 km/s. Collision of the highly accelerated deuterated polystyrene foil with a stationary target produces ∼Gbar shock pressures and results in heating of the foil to thermonuclear temperatures. The impact conditions are diagnosed using DD fusion neutron yield, with ∼106 neutrons produced during the collision. Time-of-flight neutron detectors are used to measure the ion temperature upon impact, which reaches 2–3 keV.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Polar-direct-drive experiments on the National Ignition Facilitya)

M. Hohenberger; P. B. Radha; J. F. Myatt; S. LePape; J.A. Marozas; F. J. Marshall; D.T. Michel; S. P. Regan; W. Seka; A. Shvydky; T. C. Sangster; J.W. Bates; R. Betti; T. R. Boehly; M.J. Bonino; D. T. Casey; T.J.B. Collins; R. S. Craxton; J. A. Delettrez; D. H. Edgell; R. Epstein; G. Fiksel; P. Fitzsimmons; J. A. Frenje; D. H. Froula; V.N. Goncharov; D. R. Harding; D. H. Kalantar; Max Karasik; Terrance J. Kessler

To support direct-drive inertial confinement fusion experiments at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [G. H. Miller, E. I. Moses, and C. R. Wuest, Opt. Eng. 43, 2841 (2004)] in its indirect-drive beam configuration, the polar-direct-drive (PDD) concept [S. Skupsky et al., Phys. Plasmas 11, 2763 (2004)] has been proposed. Ignition in PDD geometry requires direct-drive–specific beam smoothing, phase plates, and repointing the NIF beams toward the equator to ensure symmetric target irradiation. First experiments to study the energetics and preheat in PDD implosions at the NIF have been performed. These experiments utilize the NIF in its current configuration, including beam geometry, phase plates, and beam smoothing. Room-temperature, 2.2-mm-diam plastic shells filled with D2 gas were imploded with total drive energies ranging from ∼500 to 750 kJ with peak powers of 120 to 180 TW and peak on-target irradiances at the initial target radius from 8 × 1014 to 1.2 × 1015 W/cm2. Results from these initial experi...


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2005

Towards realization of hyper-velocities for impact fast ignition

M. Murakami; Hideo Nagatomo; Tatsuhiro Sakaiya; H. Azechi; Shinsuke Fujioka; H. Shiraga; M Nakai; K Shigemori; Saito H; S Obenschain; Max Karasik; John H. Gardner; J Bates; D Colombant; J Weaver; Y. Aglitskiy

A new ignition scheme, impact fast ignition (IFI), is studied, in which the compressed DT main fuel is to be ignited by impact with another fraction of separately imploded DT fuel, which is accelerated in the hollow conical target. The first and distinct milestone in the IFI scenario is the demonstration of such a hyper-velocity, of the order of 108 cm s−1. Two-dimensional hydrodynamic simulation results obtained in full geometry using plastic instead of DT fuel are presented, in which some key physical parameters for the impact shell dynamics, such as an implosion velocity of 108 cm s−1, a compressed density of 300–400 g cm−3 and a converted temperature greater than 5 keV, are demonstrated. A preliminary experimental result with a planar target is presented to show the highest velocity, 6 × 107 cm s−1, ever achieved.


Physics of Plasmas | 2003

Laser imprint reduction with a shaping pulse, oscillatory Richtmyer–Meshkov to Rayleigh–Taylor transition and other coherent effects in plastic-foam targets

Nathan Metzler; A.L. Velikovich; Andrew J. Schmitt; Max Karasik; V. Serlin; A. N. Mostovych; S. P. Obenschain; John H. Gardner; Y. Aglitskiy

A substantial reduction of the laser imprint with a short, low-energy “shaping” laser pulse incident upon a foam–plastic sandwich target prior to the main laser pulse has been demonstrated to be possible [Metzler et al., Phys. Plasmas 9, 5050 (2002)]. Nonuniformity of this shaping pulse, however, produces standing sonic waves in the target. Laser-imprinted seeds for the Rayleigh–Taylor (RT) instability growth then emerge from the interaction of these waves with the strong shock wave launched by the drive laser pulse. Such coherent interaction between different waves and modes perturbed at the same wavelength is shown to be important in a variety of situations relevant to the inertial confinement fusion studies. As an example, an oscillatory transition from the classical Richtmyer–Meshkov shock-interface instability development to the RT growth exhibiting a characteristic phase reversal in a target of finite thickness is described. Another example refers to the feedout mechanism of seeding the perturbation...


Applied Optics | 2015

High-energy krypton fluoride lasers for inertial fusion.

Stephen P. Obenschain; R. H. Lehmberg; D. Kehne; F. Hegeler; Matthew F. Wolford; J. D. Sethian; J.L. Weaver; Max Karasik

Laser fusion researchers have realized since the 1970s that the deep UV light from excimer lasers would be an advantage as a driver for robust high-performance capsule implosions for inertial confinement fusion (ICF). Most of this research has centered on the krypton-fluoride (KrF) laser. In this article we review the advantages of the KrF laser for direct-drive ICF, the history of high-energy KrF laser development, and the present state of the art and describe a development path to the performance needed for laser fusion and its energy application. We include descriptions of the architecture and performance of the multi-kilojoule Nike KrF laser-target facility and the 700 J Electra high-repetition-rate KrF laser that were developed at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory. Nike and Electra are the most advanced KrF lasers for inertial fusion research and energy applications.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

Implementation of focal zooming on the Nike KrF laser.

D. M. Kehne; Max Karasik; Y. Aglitsky; Z. Smyth; S. Terrell; J.L. Weaver; Y. Chan; R. H. Lehmberg; S. P. Obenschain

In direct drive inertial confinement laser fusion, a pellet containing D-T fuel is imploded by ablation arising from absorption of laser energy at its outer surface. For optimal coupling, the focal spot of the laser would continuously decrease to match the reduction in the pellets diameter, thereby minimizing wasted energy. A krypton-fluoride laser (λ = 248 nm) that incorporates beam smoothing by induced spatial incoherence has the ability to produce a high quality focal profile whose diameter varies with time, a property known as focal zooming. A two-stage focal zoom has been demonstrated on the Nike laser at the Naval Research Laboratory. In the experiment, a 4.4 ns laser pulse was created in which the on-target focal spot diameter was 1.3 mm (full width at half maximum) for the first 2.4 ns and 0.28 mm for the final 2 ns. These two diameters appear in time-integrated focal plane equivalent images taken at several locations in the amplification chain. Eight of the zoomed output beams were overlapped on a 60 μm thick planar polystyrene target. Time resolved images of self-emission from the rear of the target show the separate shocks launched by the two corresponding laser focal diameters.


Nuclear Fusion | 2014

Impact ignition as a track to laser fusion

M. Murakami; Hideo Nagatomo; Tomoyuki Johzaki; Tatsuhiro Sakaiya; A. Velikovich; Max Karasik; S. Gus'kov; N. Zmitrenko

In impact ignition, the compressed deuterium–tritium main fuel is ignited by impact with a separately imploded portion of fuel, which is accelerated in a hollow conical target to hyperspeeds of the order of 1000 km s−1. Its kinetic energy is directly converted into thermal energy corresponding to an ignition temperature of about 5 keV upon collision with the compressed fuel. The ignitor shell is irradiated by nanosecond pulses at intensities of between 1015 and 1016 W cm−2 with a wavelength of 0.25–0.35 µm, resulting in ablation pressures of several hundred mega-bars. Hydrodynamics-dominated physics and avoidance of ultra-intense petawatt lasers are notable features of this scheme. Experimental results for velocities exceeding 1000 km s−1, ion temperatures up to 3 keV, and neutron yield increases of 100-fold due to the impact effect indicate the potential of impact ignition for fusion energy production. The overall performance of impact ignition is reviewed with new analyses on the neutron yield and shell acceleration.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Observed transition from Richtmyer-Meshkov jet formation through feedout oscillations to Rayleigh-Taylor instability in a laser target

Y. Aglitskiy; Max Karasik; A.L. Velikovich; V. Serlin; J.L. Weaver; T. J. Kessler; S. P. Nikitin; Andrew J. Schmitt; S. P. Obenschain; Nathan Metzler; J. Oh

Experimental study of hydrodynamic perturbation evolution triggered by a laser-driven shock wave breakout at the free rippled rear surface of a plastic target is reported. At sub-megabar shock pressure, planar jets manifesting the development of the Richtmyer-Meshkov-type instability in a non-accelerated target are observed. As the shock pressure exceeds 1 Mbar, an oscillatory rippled expansion wave is observed, followed by the “feedout” of the rear-surface perturbations to the ablation front and the development of the Rayleigh-Taylor instability, which breaks up the accelerated target.

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Y. Aglitskiy

Science Applications International Corporation

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V. Serlin

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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Andrew J. Schmitt

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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S. P. Obenschain

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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J.L. Weaver

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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John H. Gardner

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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A.L. Velikovich

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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J. Oh

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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J.W. Bates

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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Stephen P. Obenschain

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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