X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy Measurements of Radiatively Ionized Argon gas
ORAL
Abstract
X-ray absorption spectroscopy is a diagnostic tool that can characterize the temperature and ionization state of a plasma. This technique requires experiments to characterize the platform, careful data calibration, and comparison with atomic models to understand the plasma parameters. We performed ionizing radiation wave experiments at the OMEGA Laser Facility that used an ~80 eV X-ray source to heat an Argon (Ar) gas cell at fill pressures of 3 atm. To diagnose the Ar plasma, we used a capsule backlighter offset 10mm from the gas cell, to produce X-rays that were absorbed by the ionized Ar gas. The absorption analysis was calibrated using the significant line structure in the backlighter spectrum, which served as independent energy fiducials enabling definitive measurements of a 50-eV shift in the energy of the Ar K-edge due to ionization. We compare the measured absorption spectra to two independent atomic models, PrismSPECT and SCRAM, and show that the observed K-edge shift in the heated gas is consistent with ionization up to Ar+4 and temperatures of 10 eV.
*These experiments were conducted at the Omega Laser Facility with the beam time through the NLUF user program. This work is funded by the DOE-NNSA under cooperative agreement (No. DE-NA0004146 Sandia National Laboratories, under Contract No. DE-NA0003525.
–
Publication: Kwyntero Kelso, Stephanie Hansen, Heath LeFevre, Sallee Klein, Paul Keiter, R Paul Drake, Carolyn Kuranz; X-ray absorption spectroscopy measurements of radiatively ionized argon gas. Phys. Plasmas 1 June 2025; 32 (6): 063302. https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0254083
Presenters
-
Kwyntero V Kelso
- University of Michigan