FLASH Simulations of Laser-Driven Experiments to Investigate Heat Transport in Astrophysical Magnetized Turbulence
POSTER
Abstract
There has been an extended debate about whether the conduction of heat through the tenuous, magnetized plasma that fills galaxy clusters helps to maintain the temperatures of galaxy-cluster cores at much higher values than might be expected given their short radiative cooling times. Although heat conductivity given by the classical Spitzer model suggests that thermal conduction should play a significant role, astronomical observations of temperature fluctuations over much smaller scales than global cluster scales imply strong suppression of heat conductivity compared to the Spitzer value. The precise physical mechanism behind this suppression remains to be understood. Here we present high-fidelity FLASH simulations that were used to design and execute an experimental campaign at the Omega Laser Facility by the TDYNO (Turbulent Dynamo) collaboration, to explore and quantify the suppression of heat conduction in magnetized turbulence. Guided by the FLASH simulations, we were able maximize heat conduction suppression in the magnetized turbulence by introducing heater beams that bring collisional mean free paths to values significantly larger than the plasma Larmor radii. The work builds on our recent breakthrough the National Ignition Facility (NIF), where the strong heat conduction suppression was first demonstrated.
*The Flash Center for Computational Science acknowledges support by the U.S DOE NNSA under Awards DE-NA0004144, DE-NA0004147, DE-NA0002724, DE-NA0003605, and DE-NA0003934, and Subcontracts 536203 and 630138 with LANL. This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) through the NSF GRFP Fellowship Program, DGE-1939268. Support from the U.S. DOE ARPA-E under Award DE-AR0001272, U.S. DOE Office of Science, Fusion Energy Sciences under Award DE-SC0021990, and the NSF under Awards PHY-2033925 and PHY-2308844 is also acknowledged.
Presenters
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Mary Rose McMullan
- University of Rochester