Shock structuring due to fabrication joints in targets
Phys. Plasmas 6, 3327 (1999); doi:10.1063/1.873572
Issue Date: August 1999
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The use of copper-doped beryllium ablators on National Ignition Facility [J. A. Paisner et al., Laser Focus World 30, 75 (1994)] targets, in place of plastic, can require the bonding together of hemispheres with a joint of differing composition. Indirect drive experiments have been conducted on the Nova laser [J. L. Emmet, W. F. Krupke, and J. B. Trenholme, Sov. J. Quantum Electron. 13, 1 (1983)], and the resulting shock structuring compared with code simulations. It is concluded that one of the available codes, the RAGE code [R. M. Baltrusaitis et al., Phys. Fluids 8, 2471 (1996)] provides useful insight into the effect of joints. This code is then employed to obtain a physical picture of the shock front nonuniformity in terms of a secondary rarefaction and an oblique shock interacting with the main shock that propagates in the absence of the joint. A simple analysis reinforces this picture.©1999 American Institute of Physics.
| History: | Received 22 October 1998; accepted 30 April 1999 |
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KEYWORDS and PACS
PUBLICATION DATA
1070-664X (print)
1089-7674 (online)
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