Spectroscopic Diagnostics Using Line-Radiation in Laser Driven Non-equilibrium Plasmas in a Ti-doped Silica Aerogel Foam Target

POSTER

Abstract

Experiments were performed at the Jupiter Laser Facility at LLNL, where x-ray spectroscopic measurements among other data were acquired from sub-critical-density, Ti-doped silica aerogel foams driven by a 2ω laser at ~ 5x1014 W/cm2. The main objective is to study the effect of external B-field in thermally insulating the hot plasma and investigating line-radiation in multi-keV, non-equilibrium plasmas. The near term goal is to infer a time-integrated temperature at several positions along the laser propagation axis for several B-field cases and observe any sensitivity to density for estimated plasma conditions of ne/nc ~ 0.2 and Te ~ 1 keV with 4.5% of Ti by atomic fraction in SiO2 foam target. We present time-integrated synthetic Ti spectra employing a recently developed non-LTE collisional-radiative spectroscopic model with detailed multi-frequency radiation transport scheme to diagnose the spectroscopic data. This approach was successfully used to replicate observed x-ray line spectra and diagnose plasma conditions from various wire-array and gas puff implosions on the Z machine at Sandia National Laboratories.

**Work supported by DOE/NNSA and U.S. DOE by LLNL under Contract No. DE-AC52-07NA27344 with partial support from the LLNL LDRD Program (Project #17-ERD-027).

Presenters

  • Arati Dasgupta

    • Naval Research Lab

Authors

  • Arati Dasgupta

    • Naval Research Lab
  • Nicholas David Ouart

    • Naval Research Lab
  • Gregory Elijah Kemp

    • LLNL
    • Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab
    • Lawrence Livermore National Lab
  • Heath Joseph LeFevre

    • Univ of Michigan - Ann Arbor
  • J. L. Giuliani

    • Naval Research Lab
    • Naval Research Laboratory
    • Plasma Physics Division, Naval Research Laboratory
    • U.S. Naval Research Lab
    • Plasma Physics Division, NRL
  • Emil E. Petkov

    • Naval Research Lab
    • Plasma Physics Division, Naval Research Laboratory