Small-Amplitude Richtmyer-Meshkov Instability at a Re-Shocked Material Interface

ORAL

Abstract

We report an exact small-amplitude theory of the Richtmyer-Meshkov (RM) instability developing at a re-shocked material interface and favorably compare it to our simulations. The re-shock is seen to restart the classical RM instability growth from a larger initial amplitude, at a higher rate, and change its direction from heavy-to-light to light-to heavy and vice versa. Similarly, if a Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) unstable interface is strongly re-shocked from either the heavy or light fluid side, the fast RM growth is triggered. If a RT-unstable ablation front is re-shocked, it exhibits the ablative RM-instability, that is, low-frequency decaying oscillations [V. N. Goncharov, PRL \textbf{82}, 2091 (1998); Y. Aglitskiy \textit{et al}., PRL \textbf{87}, 265001 (2001)]. This is predicted for colliding foil experiments on the Nike laser, where a RT-unstable ablation front is re-shocked by the strong shock wave produced in the collision of the laser-driven plastic foil with a stationary foam layer. The re-shock stops the acceleration and switches the perturbation evolution from the ablative RT to the ablative RM regime.

*Work supported by the U.S. DOE.

Authors

  • A.L. Velikovich

    • Plasma Physics Division, NRL
  • S.T. Zalesak

    • Plasma Physics Division, NRL
  • N. Metzler

    • SAIC
  • Y. Aglitskiy

    • SAIC