Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Wade H. Williams is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Wade H. Williams.


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.


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.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

NIF final optics system: frequency conversion and beam conditioning

Paul J. Wegner; Jerome M. Auerbach; Thomas A. Biesiada; Sham N. Dixit; Janice K. Lawson; Joseph A. Menapace; Thomas Gene Parham; David W. Swift; Pamela K. Whitman; Wade H. Williams

Installation and commissioning of the first of forty-eight Final Optics Assemblies on the National Ignition Facility was completed this past year. This activity culminated in the delivery of first light to a target. The final optics design is described and selected results from first-article commissioning and performance tests are presented.


Third International Conference on Solid State Lasers for Application to Inertial Confinement Fusion | 1999

NIF optical specifications: the importance of the RMS gradient

Janice K. Lawson; Jerome M. Auerbach; R. Edward English; Mark A. Henesian; John T. Hunt; Richard A. Sacks; John B. Trenholme; Wade H. Williams; M. J. Shoup; J. H. Kelly; Christopher T. Cotton

The performance of the National Ignition Facility (NIF), especially in terms of laser focusability, will be determined by several key factors. One of these key factors is the optical specification of the thousands of large aperture optics that will comprise the 192 beamlines. We have previously reported on the importance of the specification of the power spectral density (PSD) on NIF performance. Recently, we have been studying the importance of long spatial wavelength phase errors on focusability. We have concluded that the preferred metric for determining the impact of these long spatial wavelength phase errors is the rms phase gradient. In this paper, we outline the overall approach to NIF optical specifications, detail the impact of the rms phase gradient on NIF focusability, discuss its trade-off with the PSD in determining the spot size, and review measurements of optics similar to those to be manufactured for NIF.


Fusion Technology | 1994

Laser design basis for the National Ignition Facility

J.T. Hunt; K.R. Manes; J. R. Murray; P.A. Renard; R. Sawicki; J.B. Trenholme; Wade H. Williams

Controlled nuclear fusion initiated by highly intense laser beams has been the subject of experiment for many years. The National Ignition Facility (NIF) represents the culmination of design efforts to provide a laser facility that will successfully demonstrate fusion ignition in the laboratory. In this so-called inertial confinement approach, energetic driver beams (laser, X-ray, or charged particle) heat the outer surface of a spherical capsule containing deuterium and tritium (DT) fuel. As the capsule surface explosively evaporates, reaction pressure compresses the DT fuel causing the central core of the fuel to reach extreme density and temperature. When the central temperature is high enough, DT fusion reactions occur. The energy released from these reactions further heats the compressed fuel, and fusion burn propagates outward through the colder regions of the capsule much more rapidly than the inertially confined capsule can expand. The resulting fusion reactions yield many times more energy than was absorbed from the driver beams.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2008

The National Ignition Facility 2007 laser performance status

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

The National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory contains a 192-beam 3.6 MJ neodymium glass laser that is frequency converted to 351nm light. It has been designed to support high energy density science (HEDS), including the demonstration of fusion ignition through Inertial Confinement. To meet this goal, laser design criteria include the ability to generate pulses of up to 1.8-MJ total energy at 351nm, with peak power of 500 TW and precisely-controlled temporal pulse shapes spanning two orders of magnitude. The focal spot fluence distribution of these pulses is conditioned, through a combination of special optics in the 1ω (1053 nm) portion of the laser (continuous phase plates), smoothing by spectral dispersion (SSD), and the overlapping of multiple beams with orthogonal polarization (polarization smoothing). In 2006 and 2007, a series of measurements were performed on the NIF laser, at both 1ω and 3ω (351 nm). When scaled to full 192-beam operation, these results lend confidence to the claim that NIF will meet its laser performance design criteria and that it will be able to simultaneously deliver the temporal pulse shaping, focal spot conditioning, peak power, shot-to-shot reproducibility, and power balance requirements of indirect-drive fusion ignition campaigns. We discuss the plans and status of NIFs commissioning, and the nature and results of these measurement campaigns.


Optical Engineering | 2004

Laser performance operations model

M. J. Shaw; Wade H. Williams; Ronald K. House; C. A. Haynam

The laser performance operations model (LPOM) is developed to provide real-time predictive capabilities for the National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. LPOM uses diagnostic feedback from previous NIF shots to maintain accurate energetics models for each of the 192 NIF beamlines (utilizing one CPU per laser beamline). This model is used to determine the system setpoints (initial power, waveplate attenuations, laser diagnostic settings) required for all requested NIF shots. In addition, LPOM employs optical damage models to minimize the probability that a proposed shot may damage the system. LPOM provides postshot diagnostic reporting to support the NIF community. LPOM was deployed prior to the first main laser shots in NIF, and has since been used to set up every shot in NIFs first quad (four beamlines). Real-time adjustments of the code energetics parameters allow the LPOM to predict total energies within 5%, and provide energy balance within the four beamlines to within 2% for shots varying from 0.5 to 26 kJ (1.053 µm) per beamline. The LPOM has been a crucial tool in the commissioning of the first quad of NIF.


Physics of Plasmas | 2017

High-energy (>70 keV) x-ray conversion efficiency measurement on the ARC laser at the National Ignition Facility

H. Chen; Mark Hermann; D. H. Kalantar; D. Martinez; P. Di Nicola; R. Tommasini; O. L. Landen; D. Alessi; M. W. Bowers; D. Browning; G. Brunton; Tracy Budge; John K. Crane; J. M. Di Nicola; T. Döppner; S. Dixit; Gaylen V. Erbert; B. Fishler; J. Halpin; M. Hamamoto; John E. Heebner; Vincent J. Hernandez; M. Hohenberger; Doug Homoelle; J. Honig; W. W. Hsing; N. Izumi; S. F. Khan; K. N. LaFortune; Janice K. Lawson

The Advanced Radiographic Capability (ARC) laser system at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) is designed to ultimately provide eight beamlets with a pulse duration adjustable from 1 to 30 ps, and energies up to 1.5 kJ per beamlet. Currently, four beamlets have been commissioned. In the first set of 6 commissioning target experiments, the individual beamlets were fired onto gold foil targets with energy up to 1 kJ per beamlet at 20–30 ps pulse length. The x-ray energy distribution and pulse duration were measured, yielding energy conversion efficiencies of 4–9 × 10−4 for x-rays with energies greater than 70 keV. With greater than 3 J of such x-rays, ARC provides a high-precision x-ray backlighting capability for upcoming inertial confinement fusion and high-energy-density physics experiments on NIF.


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

A System for Measuring Defect Induced Beam Modulation on Inertial Confinement Fusion-class Laser Optics

Mike Runkel; Ruth A. Hawley-Fedder; C. Clay Widmayer; Wade H. Williams; Carolyn L. Weinzapfel; Dave Roberts

A multi-wavelength laser based system has been constructed to measure defect induced beam modulation (diffraction) from ICF class laser optics. The Nd:YLF-based modulation measurement system (MMS) uses simple beam collimation and imaging to capture diffraction patterns from optical defects onto an 8-bit digital camera at 1053, 527 and 351 nm. The imaging system has a field of view of 4.5 x 2.8 mm2 and is capable of imaging any plane from 0 to 30 cm downstream from the defect. The system is calibrated using a 477 micron chromium dot on glass for which the downstream diffraction patterns were calculated numerically. Under nominal conditions the system can measure maximum peak modulations of approximately 7:1. An image division algorithm is used to calculate the peak modulation from the diffracted and empty field images after the baseline residual light background is subtracted from both. The peak modulation can then be plotted versus downstream position. The system includes a stage capable of holding optics up to 50 pounds with x and y translation of 40 cm and has been used to measure beam modulation due to solgel coating defects, surface digs on KDP crystals, lenslets in bulk fused silica and laser damage sites mitigated with CO2 lasers.


Third International Conference on Solid State Lasers for Application to Inertial Confinement Fusion | 1999

Wavefront and divergence of the beamlet prototype laser

Paul J. Wegner; Mark A. Henesian; J. Thaddeus Salmon; Lynn G. Seppala; Timothy L. Weiland; Wade H. Williams; Bruno M. Van Wonterghem

We have measured the wavefront and the divergence of the Beamlet prototype laser under a variety of conditions. Emphasis of the tests was on quantifying best attainable divergence in the angular regime below 30 (mu) rad to benchmark propagation models that are used to set wavefront gradient specifications for NIF optical components. Performance with and without active wavefront correction was monitored with radial shearing interferometers that measured near-field wavefront at the input and output of the main amplifier with a spatial resolution of 1 cm, and cameras which measured the corresponding intensity distributions in the far field with an angular resolution of 0.3 (Mu) rad. Details of the measurements are discussed and related to NIF focal spot requirements and optics specifications.

Collaboration


Dive into the Wade H. Williams's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark A. Henesian

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Richard A. Sacks

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. Clay Widmayer

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jerome M. Auerbach

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kenneth R. Manes

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. J. Shaw

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Janice K. Lawson

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paul J. Wegner

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. A. Haynam

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Charles D. Orth

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge