Radial and Azimuthal Velocity Profiles in Gas-Puff Z-Pinches

POSTER

Abstract

The dynamics of neon, argon, and krypton (either singly or in combination) gas puff z-pinch plasmas are studied on Cornell's 1MA, 100-200ns rise-time COBRA pulsed power generator. The triple-nozzle gas puff valve, consisting of two annular gas puffs and a central jet, allows radial tailoring of the gas puff mass-density profile and the use of 1, 2 or 3 different gases at different pressures. Interferometry supplies information on sheath thickness and electron density, variously filtered PCDs and silicon diodes measure hard and soft x-ray production, and multi frame visible and extreme UV imaging systems allow tracking of the morphology of the plasma. A 527nm, 10J Thomson scattering diagnostic system is used to determine radial and azimuthal velocities. Implosion velocities of \textasciitilde 170km/s (Kr) and \textasciitilde 300km/s (Ne/Ar) are observed. We are investigating the correlations between instability growth, plasma density profile, velocity partitioning as a function of radius, and radiation production.

*Research supported by the NNSA Stewardship Sciences Academic Programs under DOE Cooperative Agreement No. DE-NA0001836.

Authors

  • Sophia Rocco

    • Cornell University
  • Joseph Engelbrecht

    • Cornell University
  • Jacob Banasek

    • Cornell University
  • Philip de Grouchy

    • Imperial College
  • Niansheng Qi

    • Cornell University
  • David Hammer

    • Cornell University