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Dive into the research topics where Y. Kuramitsu is active.

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Featured researches published by Y. Kuramitsu.


Nature | 2012

Generation of scaled protogalactic seed magnetic fields in laser-produced shock waves

G. Gregori; A. Ravasio; C. D. Murphy; K. Schaar; A. Baird; A. R. Bell; A. Benuzzi-Mounaix; R. Bingham; C. Constantin; R. P. Drake; M. Edwards; E. T. Everson; C. D. Gregory; Y. Kuramitsu; W. Lau; J. Mithen; C. Niemann; H.-S. Park; B. A. Remington; Brian Reville; A. P. L. Robinson; D. D. Ryutov; Youichi Sakawa; S. Yang; N. Woolsey; M. Koenig; Francesco Miniati

The standard model for the origin of galactic magnetic fields is through the amplification of seed fields via dynamo or turbulent processes to the level consistent with present observations. Although other mechanisms may also operate, currents from misaligned pressure and temperature gradients (the Biermann battery process) inevitably accompany the formation of galaxies in the absence of a primordial field. Driven by geometrical asymmetries in shocks associated with the collapse of protogalactic structures, the Biermann battery is believed to generate tiny seed fields to a level of about 10−21 gauss (refs 7, 8). With the advent of high-power laser systems in the past two decades, a new area of research has opened in which, using simple scaling relations, astrophysical environments can effectively be reproduced in the laboratory. Here we report the results of an experiment that produced seed magnetic fields by the Biermann battery effect. We show that these results can be scaled to the intergalactic medium, where turbulence, acting on timescales of around 700 million years, can amplify the seed fields sufficiently to affect galaxy evolution.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Characterizing counter-streaming interpenetrating plasmas relevant to astrophysical collisionless shocks

J. S. Ross; S. H. Glenzer; Peter A. Amendt; R. L. Berger; L. Divol; N. L. Kugland; O. L. Landen; C. Plechaty; B. A. Remington; D. D. Ryutov; W. Rozmus; D. H. Froula; G. Fiksel; C. Sorce; Y. Kuramitsu; T. Morita; Y. Sakawa; H. Takabe; R. P. Drake; M.J. Grosskopf; C. C. Kuranz; G. Gregori; J. Meinecke; C. D. Murphy; M. Koenig; A. Pelka; A. Ravasio; T. Vinci; Edison P. Liang; R. Presura

A series of Omega experiments have produced and characterized high velocity counter-streaming plasma flows relevant for the creation of collisionless shocks. Single and double CH2 foils have been irradiated with a laser intensity of ∼ 1016 W/cm2. The laser ablated plasma was characterized 4 mm from the foil surface using Thomson scattering. A peak plasma flow velocity of 2000 km/s, an electron temperature of ∼ 110 eV, an ion temperature of ∼ 30 eV, and a density of ∼ 1018 cm−3 were measured in the single foil configuration. Significant increases in electron and ion temperatures were seen in the double foil geometry. The measured single foil plasma conditions were used to calculate the ion skin depth, c/ωpi∼0.16 mm, the interaction length, lint, of ∼ 8 mm, and the Coulomb mean free path, λmfp∼27mm. With c/ωpi≪lint≪λmfp, we are in a regime where collisionless shock formation is possible.


Physics of Plasmas | 2010

Collisionless shock generation in high-speed counterstreaming plasma flows by a high-power laser

T. Morita; Y. Sakawa; Y. Kuramitsu; S. Dono; H. Aoki; H. Tanji; Tsunehiko N. Kato; Y. T. Li; Y. Zhang; Xiao-Long Liu; Jiayong Zhong; Hideaki Takabe; Jie Zhang

The experimental demonstration of the formation of a strong electrostatic (ES) collisionless shock has been carried out with high-speed counterstreaming plasmas, produced by a high-power laser irradiation, without external magnetic field. The nearly four times density jump observed in the experiment shows a high Mach-number shock. This large density jump is attributed to the compression of the downstream plasma by momentum transfer by ion reflection of the upstream plasma. Particle-in-cell (PIC) simulation shows the production of a collisionless high Mach-number ES shock with counterstreaming interaction of two plasma slabs with different temperatures and densities, as pointed out by Sorasio et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 045005 (2006)]. It is speculated that the shock discontinuity is balanced with the momentum of incoming and reflected ions and the predominant pressure of the electrons in the downstream with PIC simulation.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2008

High-Mach number collisionless shock and photo-ionized non-LTE plasma for laboratory astrophysics with intense lasers

Hideaki Takabe; T. Kato; Y. Sakawa; Y. Kuramitsu; T. Morita; Toshihiko Kadono; Keisuke Shigemori; Kazuto Otani; Hideo Nagatomo; Takayoshi Norimatsu; S. Dono; Takuma Endo; Kohei Miyanishi; Tomoaki Kimura; Akiyuki Shiroshita; N. Ozaki; R. Kodama; Shinsuke Fujioka; Hiroaki Nishimura; D Salzman; B. Loupias; C. D. Gregory; M. Koenig; J. Waugh; N. Woolsey; D Kato; Y. T. Li; Q-L Dong; S. Wang; Y. Zhang

We propose that most of the collisionless shocks in the Universe, for example, supernova remnant shocks, are produced because of the magnetic field generated by Weibel instability and its nonlinear process. In order to verify and validate the computational result confirming this theory, we are carrying out model experiments with intense lasers. We are going to make a collisionless counter-streaming plasma with intense laser ablation based on the scaling law to laser plasma with the particle-in-cell simulation resulting in Weibel-mediated shock formation. Preliminary experimental data are shown. The photo-ionization and resultant non-LTE plasma physics are also very important subjects in astrophysics related to mainly compact objects, for example, black hole, neutron star and white dwarf. Planckian radiation with its temperature 80–100 eV has been produced in gold cavity with irradiation of intense lasers inside the cavity. The sample materials are irradiated by the radiation inside the cavity and absorption and self-emission spectra are observed and analyzed theoretically. It is demonstrated how the effect of non-LTE is essential to reproduce the experimental spectra with the use of a precision computational code.


New Journal of Physics | 2011

Collisionless shockwaves formed by counter-streaming laser-produced plasmas

Xuchun Liu; Y. T. Li; Y. Zhang; Jiayong Zhong; W. D. Zheng; Q. L. Dong; Min Chen; Gang Zhao; Youichi Sakawa; T. Morita; Y. Kuramitsu; Tsunehiko N. Kato; Li-Juan Chen; X. R. Lu; Juan Ma; Wei Wang; Z. M. Sheng; H. Takabe; Y. J. Rhee; Yongkun Ding; Shaoen Jiang; S. Y. Liu; Jianqiang Zhu; Jie Zhang

The interaction between two counter-streaming laser-produced plasmas is investigated using the high-power Shenguang II laser facility. The shockwaves observed in our experiment are believed to be excited by collisionless mechanisms. The dimensionless parameters calculated with the results suggest that it is possible to scale the observation to the supernova remnants using transformation and similarity criteria.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Developed turbulence and nonlinear amplification of magnetic fields in laboratory and astrophysical plasmas

J. Meinecke; P. Tzeferacos; A. R. Bell; R. Bingham; Robert B. Clarke; Eugene M. Churazov; R. Crowston; Hugo Doyle; R. Paul Drake; R. Heathcote; M. Koenig; Y. Kuramitsu; C. C. Kuranz; Dongwook Lee; Michael MacDonald; C. D. Murphy; M. Notley; Hye-Sook Park; A. Pelka; Alessandra Ravasio; Brian Reville; Youichi Sakawa; W.C. Wan; N. Woolsey; Roman Yurchak; Francesco Miniati; A. A. Schekochihin; D. Q. Lamb; G. Gregori

Significance Magnetic fields exist throughout the universe. Their energy density is comparable to the energy density of the fluid motions of the plasma in which they are embedded, making magnetic fields essential players in the dynamics of the luminous matter in the universe. The origin and the amplification of these magnetic fields to their observed strengths are far from being understood. The standard model for the origin of these galactic and intergalactic magnetic fields is through the amplification of seed fields via turbulent processes to the level consistent with current observations. For this process to be effective, the amplification needs to reach a strongly nonlinear phase. Experimental evidence of the initial nonlinear amplification of magnetic fields is presented in this paper. The visible matter in the universe is turbulent and magnetized. Turbulence in galaxy clusters is produced by mergers and by jets of the central galaxies and believed responsible for the amplification of magnetic fields. We report on experiments looking at the collision of two laser-produced plasma clouds, mimicking, in the laboratory, a cluster merger event. By measuring the spectrum of the density fluctuations, we infer developed, Kolmogorov-like turbulence. From spectral line broadening, we estimate a level of turbulence consistent with turbulent heating balancing radiative cooling, as it likely does in galaxy clusters. We show that the magnetic field is amplified by turbulent motions, reaching a nonlinear regime that is a precursor to turbulent dynamo. Thus, our experiment provides a promising platform for understanding the structure of turbulence and the amplification of magnetic fields in the universe.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Visualizing electromagnetic fields in laser-produced counter-streaming plasma experiments for collisionless shock laboratory astrophysics

N. L. Kugland; J. S. Ross; P.-Y. Chang; R. P. Drake; G. Fiksel; D. H. Froula; S. H. Glenzer; G. Gregori; M.J. Grosskopf; C. M. Huntington; M. Koenig; Y. Kuramitsu; C. C. Kuranz; M. C. Levy; Edison P. Liang; D. Martinez; J. Meinecke; Francesco Miniati; T. Morita; A. Pelka; C. Plechaty; R. Presura; A. Ravasio; B. A. Remington; Brian Reville; D. D. Ryutov; Youichi Sakawa; Anatoly Spitkovsky; Hideaki Takabe; H.-S. Park

Collisionless shocks are often observed in fast-moving astrophysical plasmas, formed by non-classical viscosity that is believed to originate from collective electromagnetic fields driven by kinetic plasma instabilities. However, the development of small-scale plasma processes into large-scale structures, such as a collisionless shock, is not well understood. It is also unknown to what extent collisionless shocks contain macroscopic fields with a long coherence length. For these reasons, it is valuable to explore collisionless shock formation, including the growth and self-organization of fields, in laboratory plasmas. The experimental results presented here show at a glance with proton imaging how macroscopic fields can emerge from a system of supersonic counter-streaming plasmas produced at the OMEGA EP laser. Interpretation of these results, plans for additional measurements, and the difficulty of achieving truly collisionless conditions are discussed. Future experiments at the National Ignition Facility are expected to create fully formed collisionless shocks in plasmas with no pre-imposed magnetic field.


Physics of Plasmas | 2011

Model experiment of cosmic ray acceleration due to an incoherent wakefield induced by an intense laser pulse

Y. Kuramitsu; N. Nakanii; K. Kondo; Y. Sakawa; Yoshitaka Mori; Eisuke Miura; K. Tsuji; K. Kimura; S. Fukumochi; M. Kashihara; T. Tanimoto; H. Nakamura; T. Ishikura; K. Takeda; M. Tampo; R. Kodama; Yoneyoshi Kitagawa; Kunioki Mima; K. A. Tanaka; Masahiro Hoshino; Hideaki Takabe

The first report on a model experiment of cosmic ray acceleration by using intense laser pulses is presented. Large amplitude light waves are considered to be excited in the upstream regions of relativistic astrophysical shocks and the wakefield acceleration of cosmic rays can take place. By substituting an intense laser pulse for the large amplitude light waves, such shock environments were modeled in a laboratory plasma. A plasma tube, which is created by imploding a hollow polystyrene cylinder, was irradiated by an intense laser pulse. Nonthermal electrons were generated by the wakefield acceleration and the energy distribution functions of the electrons have a power-law component with an index of ∼2. The maximum attainable energy of the electrons in the experiment is discussed by a simple analytic model. In the incoherent wakefield the maximum energy can be much larger than one in the coherent field due to the momentum space diffusion or the energy diffusion of electrons.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

JET FORMATION IN COUNTERSTREAMING COLLISIONLESS PLASMAS

Y. Kuramitsu; Y. Sakawa; J. Waugh; C. D. Gregory; T. Morita; S. Dono; H. Aoki; H. Tanji; B. Loupias; M. Koenig; N. Woolsey; H. Takabe

Plasma jet formation was observed in counterstreaming plasmas in a laboratory experiment. In order to model an ambient plasma of astrophysical jets, the counterstreaming plasmas were created by irradiating a double CH-plane target with a high-power laser system. Since the mean free paths of the ions in terms of the counterstreaming motion were larger than the scale length of the experiment, the two-stream interaction of the plasmas was essentially collisionless. The time evolution of the jet collimation was obtained over several shots with different timing by shadowgraphy. When a single CH-plane target was irradiated, no jet collimation was observed. The counterstreaming plasma as an ambient plasma is essential for the jet plasma to collimate.


Physics of Plasmas | 2010

Laser-driven plasma jets propagating in an ambient gas studied with optical and proton diagnostics

C. D. Gregory; B. Loupias; J. Waugh; S. Dono; S. Bouquet; E. Falize; Y. Kuramitsu; C. Michaut; W. Nazarov; Sergey A. Pikuz; Y. Sakawa; N. Woolsey; M. Koenig

The results of an experiment to propagate laser-generated plasma jets into an ambient medium are presented. The jets are generated via laser irradiation of a foam-filled cone target, the results and characterization of which have been reported previously [Loupias et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 265001 (2007)] for propagation in vacuum. The introduction of an ambient medium of argon at varying density is seen to result in the formation of a shock wave, and the shock front displays perturbations that appear to grow with time. The system is diagnosed with the aid of proton radiography, imaging the perturbed structure in the dense parts of the shock with high resolution.

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C. D. Gregory

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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