Tera-FLOP particle-in-cell simulations of rapid ionization front expansion on a target due to a short-pulse ultra intense laser

ORAL

Abstract

Recent experiments utilizing a novel shadowgraphy diagnostic have allowed for time resolved measurements on a sub-picosecond time scale of the ionization of a sub micron thick target after irradiation by an intense (5×1018 W/cm2) short-pulse laser. The shadowgraphs show filaments in the ionization, suggesting that Weibel-like instabilities play a role in ionization dynamics once the laser has interacted with the target. In order to model this experiment, fully three dimensional particle-in-cell simulations, with high spatial resolution (50nm to 10nm cells) over a relatively large section of the target (40 microns by 40 microns) were required. Simulations using the Large-Scale Plasma code were performed which pushed the code's limits, requiring processing of terabytes of data and concurrent computation in the regime of a hundred trillion of floating point operations per second (Tera-FLOP). These simulations demonstrate filamentation of the magnetic field in the target yielding a density pattern consistent with the experimental observation, and this instability is seeded while the laser is still interacting with the target.

*This research was sponsored by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research through program managers Dr. Enrique Parra and Dr. Jean-Luc Cambier.

Presenters

  • Gregory K. Ngirmang

    • Innovative Scientific Solutions, Inc., Dayton, OH
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc., Dayton, OH
    • Ohio State Univ - Columbus
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions, Inc.
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc.

Authors

  • Gregory K. Ngirmang

    • Innovative Scientific Solutions, Inc., Dayton, OH
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc., Dayton, OH
    • Ohio State Univ - Columbus
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions, Inc.
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc.
  • John T Morrison

    • Innovative Scientific Solutions, Inc., Dayton, OH
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc., Dayton, OH
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc. - Dayton, OH
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions, Inc.
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc.
  • Scott B Feister

    • The University of Chicago, Flash Center, Chicago, IL
    • Univ of Chicago
  • Kevin M George

    • Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc., Dayton, OH
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc. - Dayton, OH
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions, Inc.
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc.
  • Adam J Klim

    • The Ohio State University, Department of Physics, Columbus, OH
    • Ohio State Univ - Columbus
  • Joseph C Snyder

    • Miami University, Hamilton, OH
    • Miami Univ
    • Miami Univ - Hamilton
  • Joe R Smith

    • The Ohio State University, Department of Physics, Columbus, OH
    • Ohio State Univ - Columbus
  • Kyle Frische

    • Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc., Dayton, OH
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc. - Dayton, OH
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions, Inc.
    • Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc.
  • Chris M Orban

    • Innovative Scientific Solutions, Inc., Dayton, OH, The Ohio State University, Department of Physics, Columbus, OH
    • The Ohio State University, Department of Physics, Columbus, OH, Innovative Scientific Solutions Inc., Dayton, OH
    • Ohio State Univ - Columbus
    • The Ohio State University, Department of Physics, Columbus, OH, Innovative Scientific Solutions, Inc.
  • Enam A Chowdhury

    • The Ohio State University, Department of Physics, Columbus, OH
    • The Ohio State University, Department of Physics, Columbus, OH, Intense Energy Solutions Inc., Dayton, OH
    • Ohio State Univ - Columbus
    • The Ohio State University, Department of Physics, Columbus, OH, Intense Energy Solutions, Inc., Dayton, OH
  • William M Roquemore

    • Air Force Research Laboratory, Aerospace Directorate, WPAFB, OH