The MIT HEDP Accelerator Facility for Diagnostic Development for OMEGA, Z, and the NIF
POSTER
Abstract
The student-run MIT HEDP Accelerator Facility consists of a 125-keV ion accelerator, DT and DD neutron sources, and two x-ray sources for development and characterization of diagnostics for OMEGA, Z, and the NIF. The accelerator generates DD and D3He fusion products through the acceleration of D+ ions onto a 3He-doped Erbium-Deuteride target, with fusion product rates up to 106 s−1 . The DT and DD neutron sources generate up to 6´108 and 1´107 neutrons/s, respectively. One x-ray generator is a thick-target W source with a peak energy of 225 keV; the other are based on Cu, Mo, or Ti tubes to generate x-rays with a maximum energy of 40 keV. Diagnostics developed and calibrated at this facility include CR-39-based mono-energetic particle radiography, charged-particle spectrometers, neutron detectors, and the particle Time-Of-Flight (pTOF) CVD-diamond-based bang time detector. This poster includes discussion about recent x-ray filter calibration experiments for use in new temporally and spatially resolving x-ray diagnostics PXTD and XRIS for OMEGA, as well as development of precision Step-Range-Filter particle spectrometers for NIF and OMEGA, and analysis techniques for a new Z neutron spectrometer.
*This work was supported in part by the U.S. DOE, the MIT/NNSA CoE, LLE, SNL and LLNL.
Presenters
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Fredrick H Seguin
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT