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Dive into the research topics where R. P. J. Town is active.

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Featured researches published by R. P. J. Town.


Physics of Plasmas | 2001

Analysis of a direct-drive ignition capsule designed for the National Ignition Facility

P.W. McKenty; V.N. Goncharov; R. P. J. Town; S. Skupsky; R. Betti; R. L. McCrory

This paper reviews the current direct-drive ignition capsule designed for the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [M. D. Campbell and W. J. Hogan, Plasma Phys. Control. Fusion 41, B39 (1999)]. The ignition design consists of a cryogenic deuterium–tritium (DT) shell contained within a very thin CH shell. To maintain shell integrity during the implosion, the target is placed on an isentrope approximately three times that of Fermi-degenerate DT (α=3). One-dimensional studies show that the ignition design is robust. Two-dimensional simulations examine the effects on target performance due to laser imprint, power imbalance, and inner- and outer-target-surface roughness. Results from these studies indicate that the capsule gain can be scaled to the ice/vapor surface deformation at the end of the acceleration stage of the implosion. The physical reason for gain reduction as a function of increasing nonuniformities is examined. Simulations show that direct-drive target gains in excess of 30 can be achieved for an in...


Physics of Plasmas | 1999

Laser-plasma interactions in long-scale-length plasmas under direct-drive National Ignition Facility conditions

S. P. Regan; D. K. Bradley; A. V. Chirokikh; R. S. Craxton; D. D. Meyerhofer; W. Seka; R. W. Short; Albert Simon; R. P. J. Town; B. Yaakobi; J. J. Carroll; R. P. Drake

Laser-plasma interaction experiments have been carried out on the OMEGA laser system [T. R. Boehly et al., Opt. Commun. 133, 495 (1997)] under plasma conditions representative of the peak of a 1.5 MJ direct-drive laser pulse proposed for the National Ignition Facility (NIF). Plasmas have been formed by exploding 18–20 μm thick CH foils and by irradiating solid CH targets from one side, using up to 20 kJ of laser energy with phase plates installed on all beams. These plasmas and the NIF plasmas are predicted to have electron temperatures of 4 keV and density scale lengths close to 0.75 mm at the peak of the laser pulse. The electron temperature and density of the exploding-foil plasmas have been diagnosed using time-resolved x-ray spectroscopy and stimulated Raman scattering, respectively, and are consistent with predictions of the two-dimensional Eulerian hydrodynamics code SAGE [R. S. Craxton and R. L. McCrory, J. Appl. Phys. 56, 108 (1984)]. When the solid-target or exploding-foil plasmas were irradiate...


Physics of Plasmas | 2005

Two-dimensional simulations of plastic-shell, direct-drive implosions on OMEGA

P. B. Radha; V.N. Goncharov; T.J.B. Collins; J. A. Delettrez; Y. Elbaz; V. Yu. Glebov; R. L. Keck; D. E. Keller; J. P. Knauer; J.A. Marozas; F. J. Marshall; P. W. McKenty; D. D. Meyerhofer; S. P. Regan; T. C. Sangster; D. Shvarts; S. Skupsky; Y. Srebro; R. P. J. Town; C. Stoeckl

Multidimensional hydrodynamic properties of high-adiabat direct-drive plastic-shell implosions on the OMEGA laser system [T. R. Boehly et al., Opt. Commun. 133, 495 (1997)] are investigated using the multidimensional hydrodynamic code, DRACO [D. Keller et al., Bull. Am. Phys. Soc. 44, 37 (1999)]. Multimode simulations including the effects of nonuniform illumination and target roughness indicate that shell stability during the acceleration phase plays a critical role in determining target performance. For thick shells that remain integral during the acceleration phase, target yields are significantly reduced by the combination of the long-wavelength (l<10) modes due to surface roughness and beam imbalance and the intermediate modes (20⩽l⩽50) due to single-beam nonuniformities. The neutron-production rate for these thick shells truncates relative to one-dimensional (1D) predictions. The yield degradation in the thin shells is mainly due to shell breakup at short wavelengths (λ∼Δ, where Δ is the in-flight s...


Physics of Plasmas | 2002

Deceleration phase of inertial confinement fusion implosions

R. Betti; Karen S. Anderson; V.N. Goncharov; R. L. McCrory; D. D. Meyerhofer; S. Skupsky; R. P. J. Town

A model for the deceleration phase and marginal ignition of imploding capsules is derived by solving a set of ordinary differential equations describing the hot-spot energy balance and the shell dynamics including the return shock propagation. It is found that heat flux leaving the hot spot goes back in the form of internal energy and PdV work of the material ablated off the inner-shell surface. Though the hot-spot temperature is reduced by the heat conduction losses, the hot-spot density increases due to the ablated material in such a way that the hot-spot pressure is approximately independent of heat conduction. For hot-spot temperatures exceeding approximately 7 keV, the ignition conditions are not affected by heat conduction losses that are recycled into the hot spot by ablation. Instead, the only significant internal energy loss is due to the hot-spot expansion tamped by the surrounding shell. The change of adiabat induced by the shock is also calculated for marginally igniting shells, and the relati...


Physics of Plasmas | 2000

A model of laser imprinting

V.N. Goncharov; S. Skupsky; T. R. Boehly; J. P. Knauer; P.W. McKenty; V. A. Smalyuk; R. P. J. Town; O. V. Gotchev; R. Betti; D. D. Meyerhofer

Irradiation nonuniformities in direct-drive (DD) inertial confinement fusion experiments generate, or “imprint,” surface modulations that degrade the symmetry of the implosion and reduce the target performance. To gain physical insight, an analytical model of imprint is developed. The model takes into account the hydrodynamic flow, the dynamics of the conduction zone, and the mass ablation. The important parameters are found to be the time scale for plasma atmosphere formation and the ablation velocity. The model is validated by comparisons to detailed two-dimensional (2D) hydrocode simulations. The results of the model and simulations are in good agreement with a series of planar-foil imprint experiments performed on the OMEGA laser system [T.R. Boehly, D.L. Brown, R.S. Craxton et al., Opt. Commun. 133, 495 (1997)]. Direct-drive National Ignition Facility’s [J.A. Paisner, J.D. Boyes, S.A. Kumpan, W.H. Lowdermilk, and M.S. Sorem, Laser Focus World 30, 75 (1994)] cryogenic targets are shown to have gains l...


Physics of Plasmas | 2002

First results from cryogenic target implosions on OMEGA

C. Stoeckl; Catalin Chiritescu; J. A. Delettrez; R. Epstein; V. Yu. Glebov; D. R. Harding; R. L. Keck; S. J. Loucks; L. D. Lund; R. L. McCrory; P.W. McKenty; F. J. Marshall; D. D. Meyerhofer; S.F.B. Morse; S. P. Regan; P. B. Radha; S. Roberts; Thomas C. Sangster; W. Seka; S. Skupsky; V. A. Smalyuk; C. Sorce; J. M. Soures; R. P. J. Town; J. A. Frenje; C. K. Li; R. D. Petrasso; F. H. Séguin; Kurtis A. Fletcher; S. Paladino

Initial results from direct-drive spherical cryogenic target implosions on the 60-beam OMEGA laser system [T. R. Boehly, D. L. Brown, R. S. Craxton et al., Opt. Commun. 133, 495 (1997)] are presented. These experiments are part of the scientific base leading to direct-drive ignition implosions planned for the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [W. J. Hogan, E. I. Moses, B. E. Warner et al., Nucl. Fusion 41, 567 (2001)]. Polymer shells (1-mm diam with walls <3 μm) are filled with up to 1000 atm of D2 to provide 100-μm-thick ice layers. The ice layers are smoothed by IR heating with 3.16-μm laser light and are characterized using shadowgraphy. The targets are imploded by a 1-ns square pulse with up to ∼24 kJ of 351-nm laser light at a beam-to-beam rms energy balance of <3% and full-beam smoothing. Results shown include neutron yield, secondary neutron and proton yields, the time of peak neutron emission, and both time-integrated and time-resolved x-ray images of the imploding core. The experimental values are...


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2001

Hard x-ray detectors for OMEGA and NIF

C. Stoeckl; V. Yu. Glebov; D. D. Meyerhofer; W. Seka; B. Yaakobi; R. P. J. Town; Jonathan D. Zuegel

Laser–plasma instabilities that produce an unacceptably high level of hot electrons are potentially dangerous for both direct-drive and indirect-drive inertial confinement laser fusion. The hot electrons preheat the fuel and prevent compression of the capsule to the requisite conditions for ignition. Fast electron generation and preheat can be inferred from the hard x-ray radiation generated by the interaction of the hot electrons with the target. On the University of Rochester’s OMEGA laser system, time-resolved hard x-ray detectors have been operating in an energy range from 10 to 500 keV. In this article we will present initial results for the yield and spectrum of the hard x-ray radiation. The concept used on OMEGA can be easily extended to infer the amount of laser energy coupled to suprathermal electrons and to the target for both direct- and indirect-drive implosions on the upcoming National Ignition Facility, as well as to measure the conversion efficiency in high-x-ray-yield experiments.


Physics of Plasmas | 2000

Direct-drive high-convergence-ratio implosion studies on the OMEGA laser system*

Frederic J. Marshall; J. A. Delettrez; R. Epstein; V. Yu. Glebov; D. R. Harding; P.W. McKenty; D. D. Meyerhofer; P. B. Radha; W. Seka; S. Skupsky; V. A. Smalyuk; J. M. Soures; C. Stoeckl; R. P. J. Town; B. Yaakobi; C. K. Li; F. H. Séguin; Damien G. Hicks; R. D. Petrasso

A series of direct-drive implosion experiments, using room-temperature, gas-filled CH targets, are performed on the University of Rochester’s OMEGA laser system [T. R. Boehly et al., Opt. Commun. 133, 495 (1997)]. The target performance at stagnation and its dependence on beam smoothing and pulse shaping is investigated. Compressed core conditions are diagnosed using x-ray and neutron spectroscopy, and x-ray imaging. The individual beams of OMEGA are smoothed by spectral dispersion in two dimensions (2D SSD) with laser bandwidths up to ∼0.3 THz, with 1 ns square to 2.5 ns shaped pulses. A clear dependence of target performance on pulse shape and beam smoothing is seen, with the target performance (yield, areal density, and shell integrity) improving as SSD bandwidth is applied.


Physics of Plasmas | 1999

Nonlinear evolution of broad-bandwidth, laser-imprinted nonuniformities in planar targets accelerated by 351-nm laser light

V. A. Smalyuk; Thomas R. Boehly; D. K. Bradley; V.N. Goncharov; J. A. Delettrez; J. P. Knauer; D. D. Meyerhofer; D. Oron; D. Shvarts; Y. Srebro; R. P. J. Town

Planar, 20 and 40 μm thick CH targets have been accelerated by 351 nm laser beams of the OMEGA laser system [Opt. Commun. 133, 495 (1997)]. Different beam-smoothing techniques were employed including distributed phase plates, smoothing by spectral dispersion, and distributed polarization rotators. The Rayleigh–Taylor evolution of three-dimensional (3D) broadband planar-target perturbations seeded by laser nonuniformities was measured using x-ray radiography at ∼1.3 keV. Fourier analysis shows that the perturbations evolve to longer wavelengths and the shorter wavelengths saturate. The saturation amplitudes and rates of growth of these features are consistent with the predictions of Haan [Phys. Rev. A 39, 5812 (1989)].


Physics of Plasmas | 2002

Rayleigh–Taylor instability in the deceleration phase of spherical implosion experiments

V. A. Smalyuk; J. A. Delettrez; V.N. Goncharov; F. J. Marshall; D. D. Meyerhofer; S. P. Regan; T. C. Sangster; R. P. J. Town; B. Yaakobi

The temporal evolution of inner-shell modulations, unstable during the deceleration phase of a laser-driven spherical implosion, has been measured through K-edge imaging [B. Yaakobi et al., Phys. Plasmas 7, 3727 (2000)] of shells with titanium-doped layers. The main study was based on the implosions of 1 mm diam, 20 μm thick shells filled with either 18 atm or 4 atm of D3He gas driven with 23 kJ, 1 ns square laser pulses on OMEGA [T. R. Boehly et al., Opt. Commun. 133, 495 (1997)]. These targets have similar modulation levels at the beginning of the deceleration phase due to similar modulation growths in the acceleration phase, but different modulation growths throughout the deceleration phase due to different fill pressures (convergence ratios). At peak compression, the measured inner surface, areal-density nonuniformity σrms levels were 23±5 % for more-stable 18 atm fill targets and 53±11 % for less-stable 4 atm fill targets. The inner-surface modulations grow throughout the deceleration phase due to Ra...

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S. Skupsky

University of Rochester

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B. Yaakobi

University of Rochester

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S. P. Regan

University of Rochester

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C. Stoeckl

University of Rochester

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P. B. Radha

University of Rochester

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