125 results on '"Hitoshi Sakagami"'
Search Results
2. Picosecond snapshot imaging of electric fields induced on a cone guide target designed for fast ignition scenario
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Binghe Shi, Akifumi Yogo, Kazuki Okamoto, Daniil Golovin, Seyed Reza Mirfayzi, Alessio Morace, Yasunobu Arikawa, Kohei Yamanoi, Yuki Abe, Masakatsu Murakami, Yanjun Gu, Kunioki Mima, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Mitsuo Nakai, Hiroyuki Nishimura, Hiroyuki Shiraga, Shinsuke Fujioka, Tomoyuki Johzaki, Akifumi Iwamoto, Hitoshi Sakagami, and Ryosuke Kodama
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Condensed Matter Physics - Abstract
In this study, we experimentally evaluate the ion transportation through a cone guide target, which accelerates ions up to MeV energies via target normal sheath acceleration, and transports them onto the position of imploding fuel in the fast ignition scenario of nuclear fusion. We measured the electric and magnetic fields (EM-fields) induced by return current streaming along the cone wall by proton radiography, and we report that the EM-fields are predominantly induced within a temporal window up to 30 ps after the laser injection. The magnitude of the electric field is maximized around 13 ps, reaching $4.0\times 10^{10} \mathrm {V}\ \mathrm {m}^{-1}$ , when the magnetic field is below 200 T. The present scheme provides insights on the EM-fields evaluation in the time region that is difficult to treat with simulations due to the computing resources.
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- 2022
3. Pulse duration constraint of whistler waves in magnetized dense plasma
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Yasuhiko Sentoku, Masayasu Hata, Hitoshi Sakagami, Hideo Nagatomo, and Takayoshi Sano
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Brillouin zone ,Physics ,Amplitude ,Whistler ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,Brillouin scattering ,Quantum electrodynamics ,Physics::Space Physics ,Pulse duration ,Plasma ,Instability ,Magnetic field - Abstract
Interactions between large-amplitude laser light and strongly magnetized dense plasma have been investigated by one- and two-dimensional electromagnetic particle-in-cell simulations. Since whistler waves have no critical density, they can propagate through plasmas beyond the critical density in principle. However, we have found the propagation of whistler waves is restricted significantly by the stimulated Brillouin scattering. It is confirmed that the period during which the whistler wave can propagate in overcritical plasmas is proportional to the growth time of the ion-acoustic wave via the Brillouin instability. The allowable pulse duration of the whistler wave has a power-law dependence on the amplitude of the whistler wave and the external magnetic field.
- Published
- 2021
4. Demonstration of a spherical plasma mirror for the counter-propagating kilojoule-class petawatt LFEX laser system
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Sadaoki Kojima, Yuki Abe, Eisuke Miura, Tetsuo Ozaki, Kohei Yamanoi, Tomokazu Ikeda, Yubo Wang, Jinyuan Dun, Shuwang Guo, Tamaki Maekawa, Ryunosuke Takizawa, Hiroki Morita, Shoui Asano, Yasunobu Arikawa, Hiroshi Sawada, Katsuhiro Ishii, Ryohei Hanayama, Shinichiro Okihara, Yoneyoshi Kitagawa, Yasuhiro Kajimura, Alessio Morace, Hiroyuki Shiraga, Keisuke Shigemori, Atsushi Sunahara, Natsumi Iwata, Takayoshi Sano, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Tomoyuki Johzaki, Masaharu Nishikino, Akifumi Iwamoto, Kenichi Nagaoka, Hitoshi Sakagami, Shinsuke Fujioka, and Yoshitaka Mori
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Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics - Abstract
A counter-propagating laser-beam platform using a spherical plasma mirror was developed for the kilojoule-class petawatt LFEX laser. The temporal and spatial overlaps of the incoming and redirected beams were measured with an optical interferometer and an x-ray pinhole camera. The plasma mirror performance was evaluated by measuring fast electrons, ions, and neutrons generated in the counter-propagating laser interaction with a Cu-doped deuterated film on both sides. The reflectivity and peak intensity were estimated as ∼50% and ∼5 × 1018 W/cm2, respectively. The platform could enable studies of counter-streaming charged particles in high-energy-density plasmas for fundamental and inertial confinement fusion research.
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- 2022
5. Uniformity evaluation of laser-induced periodic surface structures formed by two-color double-pulse femtosecond laser irradiation
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Keisuke Takenaka, Masaki Hashida, Hitoshi Sakagami, Shin-ichiro Masuno, Mitsuhiro Kusaba, Shigeru Yamaguchi, Satoru Iwamori, Yuji Sato, and Masahiro Tsukamoto
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Instrumentation - Abstract
The Perpendicular Period and Phase Scanning (P3S) method can evaluate the uniformity of a laser-induced periodic surface structure (LIPSS). P3S assesses the uniformity of LIPSS using the standard deviation of the peak period and the average of the phase difference in the direction perpendicular to LIPSS. The P3S method demonstrates that LIPSS formed by two-color double-pulse irradiation is reduced to a quarter of the period dispersion, and the average phase difference of LIPSS is also reduced compared to the single-pulse irradiation. In addition, a 3D electromagnetic particle-in-cell simulation was performed to evaluate the possibility of an improved uniformity of LIPSS. The results confirm that the two-color double-pulse irradiation produces a uniform LIPSS and validates the effectiveness of the P3S method to assess the uniformity of LIPSS.
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- 2022
6. Ablation suppression of a titanium surface interacting with a two-color double-pulse femtosecond laser beam
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Keisuke Takenaka, Mitsuhiro Kusaba, Masaki Hashida, Masahiro Tsukamoto, Shinichiro Masuno, Shunsuke Inoue, Shuji Sakabe, Hitoshi Sakagami, Yuki Furukawa, and Satoru Asai
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Materials science ,medicine.medical_treatment ,General Physics and Astronomy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Fluence ,law.invention ,Optics ,law ,medicine ,Irradiation ,Pulse (signal processing) ,business.industry ,Surfaces and Interfaces ,General Chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Laser ,Ablation ,0104 chemical sciences ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,chemistry ,Femtosecond ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Beam (structure) ,Titanium - Abstract
The suppression of ablation rate on a titanium surface irradiated by a double-pulse beam with a two-color laser was experimentally investigated with time delays of Δt = 0–700 ps. The double pulse beam consists of 800 nm with 150 fs pulse and 400 nm with >150 fs pulse. The fundamental-pulse fluence F800 is kept below the ablation threshold (F800th = 0.108 J/cm2), while the second harmonic pulse fluence F400 is above the ablation threshold (F400th = 0.090 J/cm2). The ablation rate of titanium is clearly suppressed to 2.39 nm per pair with a time delay of Δt = 200 ps. This ablation rate corresponds to one-third of the 7.3 nm/pulse for only the first pulse beam, but it corresponds to about one-half of the one-color double-pulse irradiation. Ablation suppression with a two-color double-pulse beam is more pronounced compared to that for a one-color double pulse beam, which may be due to the shorter optical penetration length of the first pulse.
- Published
- 2019
7. Direct fast heating efficiency of a counter-imploded core plasma employing a laser for fast ignition experiments (LFEX)
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Yoneyoshi Kitagawa, Yoshitaka Mori, Katsuhiro Ishii, Ryohei Hanayama, Shinichiro Okihara, Yasunobu Arikawa, Yuki Abe, Eisuke Miura, Tetsuo Ozaki, Osamu Komeda, Hiroyuki Suto, Yusuke Umetani, Atsushi Sunahra, Tomoyuki Johzaki, Hitoshi Sakagami, Akifumi Iwamoto, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Nozomi Nakajima, Shohei Sakata, Kazuki Matsuo, Reza S. Mirfayzi, Junji Kawanaka, Shinsuke Fujiokua, Koji Tsubakimoto, Keisuke Shigemori, Kohei Yamanoi, Akifumi Yogo, Ayami Nakao, Masatada Asano, Hiroyuki Shiraga, Tomoyoshi Motohiro, Tatsumi Hioki, and Hirozumi Azuma
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counter implosion ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,direct heating ,heating efficiency ,fast ignition ,Condensed Matter Physics - Abstract
Fast heating efficiency when a pre-imploded core is directly heated with an ultraintense laser (heating laser) was investigated. ‘Direct heating’ means that a heating laser hits a pre-imploded core without applying either a laser guiding cone or an external field. The efficiency, η, is defined as the increase in the internal core energy divided by the energy of the heating laser. Six beams (output of 1.6 kJ) from the GEKKO XII (GXII) green laser system at the Institute of Laser Engineering (ILE), Osaka University were applied to implode a spherical deuterated polystyrene (CD) shell target to form a dense core. The DD-reacted protons and the core x-ray emissions showed a core density of 2.8 ± 0.7 g cm−3, or 2.6 times the solid density. Furthermore, DD-reacted thermal neutrons were utilized to estimate the core temperature between 600 and 750 eV. Thereafter, the core was directly heated by a laser for fast-ignition experiments (LFEX, an extremely energetic ultrashort pulse laser) at ILE with its axis lying along or perpendicular to the GXII bundle axis, respectively. The former and latter laser configurations were termed ‘axial’ and ‘transverse modes’, respectively. The η was estimated from three independent methods: (1) the core x-ray emission, (2) the thermal neutron yield, and (3) the runaway hot electron spectra. For the axial mode, 0.8% < η < 2.1% at low power (low LFEX energy) and 0.4% < η < 2.5% at high power (high LFEX energy). For the transverse mode, 2.6% < η < 7% at low power and 1.5% < η < 7.7% at high power. Their efficiencies were compared with that in the uniform implosion mode using 12 GXII beams, 6% < η < 12%, which appeared near to the η for the transverse mode, except that the error bar is very large.
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- 2022
8. Estimation of a Plasma Mirror Reflectivity of LFEX Laser and Relevant Results Using Electron Energy Spectrometers
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Tetsuo OZAKI, Eisuke MIURA, Sadaoki KOJIMA, Yasunobu ARIKAWA, Yuuki ABE, Kohei YAMANOI, Tomokazu IKEDA, Katsuhiro ISHII, Atsushi SUNAHARA, Tomoyuki JOHZAKI, Hiroshi SAWADA, Shinsuke FUJIOKA, Hitoshi SAKAGAMI, Yoneyoshi KITAGAWA, and Yoshitaka MORI
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ESM ,LFEX ,effective temperature ,plasma mirror ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Wilks' scaling ,fast ignition ,Condensed Matter Physics ,counter irradiation - Abstract
In the counter-irradiation, which is one of the fast ignition schemes, higher core energy coupling can be expected when there are two hot electron flows in counter directions. Two plasma mirrors were installed for the counter irradiation at about 180 degrees. The hot electron effective temperatures (Teff) were measured by using electron energy spectrometers. Teff vs the laser intensity on a foil target followed Wilkes' scaling law. The energy incident on the target could be calculated by estimating the laser intensity on the target from Teff and estimating the focusing radius from the X-ray pinhole camera image. As a result, the reflectivity could be estimated to be 17 ± 3%.
- Published
- 2022
9. Three-Dimensional Fluid Code with XcalableMP
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Hitoshi Sakagami
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Fortran ,Computer science ,Programming language ,Domain decomposition methods ,Eulerian path ,computer.software_genre ,Directive ,symbols.namesake ,Programming paradigm ,symbols ,Code (cryptography) ,Distributed memory ,Compiler ,computer ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
In order to adapt parallel computers to general convenient tools for computational scientists, a high-level and easy-to-use portable parallel programming paradigm is mandatory. XcalableMP, which is proposed by the XcalableMP Specification Working Group, is a directive-based language extension for Fortran and C to easily describe parallelization in programs for distributed memory parallel computers. The Omni XcalableMP compiler, which is provided as a reference XcalableMP compiler, is currently implemented as a source-to-source translator. It converts XcalableMP programs to standard MPI programs, which can be easily compiled by the native Fortran compiler and executed on most of parallel computers. A three-dimensional Eulerian fluid code written in Fortran is parallelized by XcalableMP using two different programming models with the ordinary domain decomposition method, and its performances are measured on the K computer. Programs converted by the Omni XcalableMP compiler prevent native Fortran compiler optimizations and show lower performance than that of hand-coded MPI programs. Finally almost the same performances are obtained by using specific compiler options of the native Fortran compiler in the case of a global-view programming model, but performance degradation is not improved by specifying any native compiler options when the code is parallelized by a local-view programming model.
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- 2020
10. Ten hertz bead pellet injection and laser engagement
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Tatsumi Hioki, Shinichiro Okihara, Akifumi Iwamoto, Tomoyuki Johzaki, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Yasuhiko Nishimura, Tomoyoshi Motohiro, Katsuhiro Ishii, Osamu Komeda, Atsushi Sunahara, Hitoshi Sakagami, Ryohei Hanayama, Eisuke Miura, Yoshitaka Mori, and Yoneyoshi Kitagawa
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Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Materials science ,law ,Pellet ,high-repetition laser ,laser engagement ,inertial fusion energy ,pellet injection ,Composite material ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Laser ,law.invention - Abstract
A laser inertial fusion energy (IFE) reactor requires repetitive injection of fuel pellets and laser engagement to fuse fusion fuel beyond a few Hz. We demonstrate 10 Hz free-fall bead pellet injection and laser engagement with γ-ray generation. Deuterated polystyrene beads with a diameter of 1 mm were engaged by counter illuminating ultra-intense laser pulses with an intensity of 5 × 1017 W cm−2 at 10 Hz. The spatial distribution of free-fall beads was 0.86 mm in the horizontal direction and 0.18 mm in the vertical direction. The system operated for more than 5 min and 3500 beads were supplied with achieved frequencies of 2.1 Hz for illumination on the beads and 0.7 Hz for γ-ray generation; these frequencies were three times greater than with the previous 1 Hz injection system. The duration of operation was limited by the pellet supply. This injection and engagement system could be used for laser IFE research platforms.
- Published
- 2022
11. 1-Hz Bead-Pellet Injection System for Fusion Reaction Engaged by a Laser HAMA Using Ultra-Intense Counter Beams
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Yasuki Takeuchi, Yoshinori Kato, Akifumi Iwamoto, Tatsumi Hioki, Atsushi Sunahara, Eisuke Miura, Yoshitaka Mori, Yoneyoshi Kitagawa, Takashi Sekine, Ryohei Hanayama, Hitoshi Sakagami, Nakahiro Satoh, Tomoyoshi Motohiro, Yasuhiko Nishimura, Katsuhiro Ishii, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Takashi Kurita, Toshiyuki Kawashima, Osamu Komeda, and Norio Kurita
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Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Materials science ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,020209 energy ,Pellets ,Physics::Optics ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,law.invention ,Bead (woodworking) ,Optics ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Pellet ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Nuclear fusion ,General Materials Science ,Physics::Atomic Physics ,Irradiation ,Inertial confinement fusion ,Civil and Structural Engineering ,business.industry ,Mechanical Engineering ,Fusion power ,Laser ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,business - Abstract
The injection and engagement of pellets using laser beam irradiation is one of the key technologies to realize a laser-driven inertial fusion energy (IFE) reactor. We irradiated ultra-intense laser...
- Published
- 2018
12. Delay times for ablation rate suppression by femtosecond laser irradiation with a two-color double-pulse beam
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Keisuke Takenaka, Naoki Shinohara, Masaki Hashida, Mitsuhiro Kusaba, Hitoshi Sakagami, Yuji Sato, Shin-ichiro Masuno, Takeshi Nagashima, and Masahiro Tsukamoto
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Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) - Published
- 2021
13. Improvement of ignition and burning target design for fast ignition scheme
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Masayasu Hata, Tomoyuki Johzaki, Hideo Nagatomo, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Hitoshi Sakagami, Kunioki Mima, and Shinsuke Fujioka
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Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Materials science ,Nuclear engineering ,Implosion ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Laser ,Instability ,Pulse (physics) ,law.invention ,Core (optical fiber) ,Ignition system ,law ,Area density ,Inertial confinement fusion - Abstract
For the fast ignition scheme of laser fusion, a highly compressed fuel core is necessary using a cone-inserted spherical solid target. We design an optimal compression method with a multistep laser pulse shape using a 2-D radiation hydrodynamics simulation. In the design, the maximum areal density is ρRmax =0.46 g/cm2 with 8 kJ of implosion laser. Considering the scaling law of hydrodynamic, we obtained 82 kJ and 1.3 MJ for the ignition-scale-target (ρRmax =1.1 g/cm2) and for burning-scale-target (ρRmax =2.5 g/cm2), respectively. In a preliminary study of hydrodynamic instability in the optimized cone-inserted implosion, there is no significant growth of the instabilities that affect the implosion performance. A parameter search to investigate the feasibility and robustness of a high areal density design for changes in the laser pulse shape is performed. As a result, a delay of several tens of pico-second of the rising laser pulse is acceptable.
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- 2021
14. Simulation of a Lithium-Ion Battery
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T. Yanagawa, Hitoshi Sakagami, and Kunioki Mima
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Materials science ,Inorganic chemistry ,Lithium-ion battery - Published
- 2019
15. Peta-Pascal Pressure Driven by Fast Isochoric Heating with Multi-Picosecond Intense Laser Pulse
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Hiroyuki Shiraga, Shohei Sakata, King Fai Farley Law, Sadaoki Kojima, Mitsuo Nakai, Kunioki Mima, Yoshiki Nakata, Takayoshi Sano, Yuki Abe, Atsushi Sunahara, Kohei Yamanoi, Yugo Ochiai, Seung Ho Lee, Shinsuke Fujioka, Yuki Iwasa, Tetsuo Ozaki, Takayoshi Norimatsu, Yasunobu Arikawa, Hiroshi Sawada, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Tomoyuki Johzaki, Masayasu Hata, Shigeki Tokita, Naoki Higashi, Natsumi Iwata, Hiroki Morita, Alessio Morace, Akifumi Yogo, Ryosuke Kodama, Hiroshi Azechi, Hideo Nagatomo, Hitoshi Sakagami, Kazuki Matsuo, and Junji Kawanaka
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Materials science ,Isochoric process ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Implosion ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Plasma ,Electron ,Laser ,7. Clean energy ,01 natural sciences ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,3. Good health ,law.invention ,Pulse (physics) ,Magnetic field ,Plasma Physics (physics.plasm-ph) ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,law ,Physics::Space Physics ,0103 physical sciences ,Atomic physics ,010306 general physics ,Intensity (heat transfer) - Abstract
Fast isochoric laser heating is a scheme to heat a matter with relativistic-intensity ($>$ 10$^{18}$ W/cm$^2$) laser pulse or X-ray free electron laser pulse. The fast isochoric laser heating has been studied for creating efficiently ultra-high-energy-density (UHED) state. We demonstrate an fast isochoric heating of an imploded dense plasma using a multi-picosecond kJ-class petawatt laser with an assistance of externally applied kilo-tesla magnetic fields for guiding fast electrons to the dense plasma.The UHED state with 2.2 Peta-Pascal is achieved experimentally with 4.6 kJ of total laser energy that is one order of magnitude lower than the energy used in the conventional implosion scheme. A two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulation reveals that diffusive heating from a laser-plasma interaction zone to the dense plasma plays an essential role to the efficient creation of the UHED state., 8 pages, 4 figures, 1 table
- Published
- 2019
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16. Verification of fast heating of core plasmas produced by counter-illumination of implosion lasers
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Tomoyuki Johzaki, R. Takizawa, Kazuki Matsuo, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Y. Mori, Eisuke Miura, S. Sakata, S. R. Mirfayzi, T. Ozaki, Atsushi Sunahara, Yasuhiro Abe, Osamu Komeda, Y. Kitagawa, Nozomi Nakajima, Akifumi Iwamoto, Hiroki Morita, Ryohei Hanayama, Shinsuke Fujioka, Hitoshi Sakagami, Yasunobu Arikawa, K. Ishii, and Shinichiro Okihara
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Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Radiation ,Thermonuclear fusion ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Physics::Optics ,Implosion ,Plasma ,Laser ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,law.invention ,Core (optical fiber) ,Optics ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Physics::Atomic Physics ,Coaxial ,010306 general physics ,business ,Inertial confinement fusion ,Beam (structure) - Abstract
We conducted fast heating of a core plasma produced by counter-illumination of two beam bundles of implosion lasers for two incident directions of the heating laser. For the axial heating configuration, wherein the heating laser was incident along the coaxial direction of the implosion lasers, the size and density of the counter-imploded core plasma were estimated. The incident timing of the heating laser was determined. Although the heating laser was incident during the stagnation of the core plasma, there were no considerable increases in the intensity of X-rays with energies beyond 1 keV and the yield of the thermonuclear fusion neutrons. Effective core heating did not occur due to the interaction of the heating laser with the low-density ablated plasma far from the core. On the other hand, for the transverse heating configuration, wherein the heating laser was incident from the transverse direction of the implosion laser axis, optimization of the incident timing of the heating laser was not achieved. However, two-dimensional radiation-hydrodynamic simulation revealed that a heating laser can directly interact with a core plasma and effective heating is expected. In our scheme, transverse heating configuration appears to be significant.
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- 2020
17. Uniform LIPSS on titanium irradiated by two-color double-pulse beam of femtosecond laser
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Mitsuhiro Kusaba, Shunsuke Inoue, Shuji Sakabe, Masaki Hashida, Hitoshi Sakagami, Yuki Furukawa, Masahiro Tsukamoto, and Shinichiro Masuno
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010302 applied physics ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Waves in plasmas ,Biomedical Engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Plasma ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Laser ,01 natural sciences ,Fluence ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,law.invention ,Pulse (physics) ,Wavelength ,Optics ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Femtosecond ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Instrumentation ,Beam (structure) - Abstract
The authors have investigated the uniformity of laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSSs) generated on titanium surfaces irradiated with a two-color double-pulse cross-polarized beam with a time delay of Δt = 0–200 ps. The double-pulse beam consisted of 800 nm pulses with a duration of 150 fs and 400 nm pulses with a duration of >150 fs. The fundamental-pulse fluence F800 and the second-harmonic pulse fluence F400 were set to be near the corresponding ablation thresholds of F800th = 0.108 J/cm2 and F400th = 0.090 J/cm2, respectively. The authors found that uniform LIPSSs could be produced on titanium surfaces using laser fluences of 1.5F400th + 0.9F800th and a delay of Δt = 0–2 ps. The periodicity and direction of the LIPSSs were characterized by the wavelength and electric field of the fundamental (800 nm) pulse. The results suggest that the longer-wavelength pulse influences surface plasma wave generation and improves uniformity by the second harmonic pulse even though laser plasma is produced on the surface.
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- 2020
18. Suppression of ablation by double-pulse femtosecond laser irradiation
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Mitsuhiro Kusaba, Hitoshi Sakagami, Yuki Furukawa, Masahiro Tsukamoto, Shinichiro Masuno, Masaki Hashida, Shunsuke Inoue, Shuji Sakabe, and Shogo Nishino
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Materials science ,Silicon ,Pulse (signal processing) ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Laser ,Ablation ,Fluence ,law.invention ,Optics ,chemistry ,law ,Femtosecond ,medicine ,Irradiation ,business ,Beam (structure) - Abstract
We have demonstrated the suppression of ablation rate on a silicon surface irradiated by a double-pulse beam with two color laser in time delays of Δt = -900 - 900 ps. The double pulse beam consists of 810nm with 40fs pulse and 405nm with > 40fs pulse. The fundamental-pulse fluence F810 is kept below ablation threshold (Fth, 810nm = 0.190 J/cm2 ) while the second harmonic pulse fluence F405 are kept above the ablation threshold (Fth, 405nm = 0.050 J/cm2 ). We find that ablation rate of silicon is drastically decreased at delay times of 600ps.
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- 2018
19. Asymmetric implosion of a cone-guided target irradiated by Gekko XII laser
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T. Yanagawa, Hideo Nagatomo, Hitoshi Sakagami, and Atsushi Sunahara
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Materials science ,biology ,business.industry ,Implosion ,Condensed Matter Physics ,biology.organism_classification ,Laser ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,law.invention ,Nuclear physics ,Gekko ,Optics ,law ,Laser intensity ,Compression ratio ,Irradiation ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,Inertial confinement fusion ,Beam (structure) - Abstract
In implosion experiments of a cone-guided target using Gekko XII laser, the lasers on the cone side are not irradiated to avoid the irradiation of the cone. In such condition, the implosion process is done highly asymmetrically. Thus we evaluated the effects of the asymmetric implosion on the compression ratio of the fuel in Gekko XII irradiation orientation by three-dimensional hydro simulations. In this paper, we discuss the degradation of the compression ratio by asymmetric implosion and show that the compression ratio can be enhanced by adjusting the laser intensity between each beam to reduce the asymmetry of the implosion.
- Published
- 2015
20. Velocity measurement using frequency domain interferometer and chirped pulse laser
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Atsushi Sunahara, Hitoshi Sakagami, Akifumi Iwamoto, Yasuhiko Nishimura, Eisuke Miura, Ryohei Hanayama, Y. Kitagawa, Nakahiro Sato, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Takashi Sekine, Keizo Ishii, T. Kawashima, T. Kurita, and Yusuke Mori
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Femtosecond pulse shaping ,Shock wave ,Physics ,business.industry ,Astrophysics::Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics::Optics ,Laser ,Pulsed laser deposition ,law.invention ,Shock (mechanics) ,Interferometry ,Optics ,law ,Frequency domain ,Astronomical interferometer ,Physics::Atomic Physics ,business - Abstract
An ultra-intense short pulse laser induces a shock wave in material. The pressure of shock compression is stronger than a few tens GPa. To characterize shock waves, time-resolved velocity measurement in nano- or pico-second time scale is needed. Frequency domain interferometer and chirped pulse laser provide single-shot time-resolved measurement. We have developed a laser-driven shock compression system and frequency domain interferometer with CPA laser. In this paper, we show the principle of velocity measurement using a frequency domain interferometer and a chirped pulse laser. Next, we numerically calculated spectral interferograms and show the time-resolved velocity measurement can be done from the phase analysis of spectral interferograms. Moreover we conduct the laser driven shock generation and shock velocity measurement. From the spectral fringes, we analyze the velocities of the sample and shockwaves.
- Published
- 2017
21. Boosting laser-ion acceleration with multi-picosecond pulses
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N. Iwata, Takayoshi Norimatsu, H. Shiraga, Kazuki Matsuo, N. Kamitsukasa, N. Miyanaga, Kohei Yamanoi, Akito Sagisaka, Yasunobu Arikawa, Akifumi Yogo, Shigeki Tokita, Sergei V. Bulanov, Sadaoki Kojima, Kunioki Mima, Shinsuke Fujioka, Mitsuo Nakai, Hitoshi Sakagami, Tomoyuki Johzaki, J. Kawanaka, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Hiroshi Azechi, Alessio Morace, Kiminori Kondo, Hideo Nagatomo, Hiroaki Nishimura, S. Tosaki, and Masakatsu Murakami
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Multidisciplinary ,Materials science ,Proton ,Nuclear Theory ,Energy conversion efficiency ,Pulse duration ,Laser ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Ponderomotive energy ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Ion ,law.invention ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,law ,Picosecond ,0103 physical sciences ,Physics::Accelerator Physics ,Electron temperature ,Atomic physics ,Nuclear Experiment ,010306 general physics - Abstract
Using one of the world most powerful laser facility, we demonstrate for the first time that high-contrast multi-picosecond pulses are advantageous for proton acceleration. By extending the pulse duration from 1.5 to 6 ps with fixed laser intensity of 1018 W cm−2, the maximum proton energy is improved more than twice (from 13 to 33 MeV). At the same time, laser-energy conversion efficiency into the MeV protons is enhanced with an order of magnitude, achieving 5% for protons above 6 MeV with the 6 ps pulse duration. The proton energies observed are discussed using a plasma expansion model newly developed that takes the electron temperature evolution beyond the ponderomotive energy in the over picoseconds interaction into account. The present results are quite encouraging for realizing ion-driven fast ignition and novel ion beamlines.
- Published
- 2017
22. Periodic Grating Structures on Metal Self-organized by Double-pulse Irradiation
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Shunsuke Inoue, Yasuhiro Miyasaka, Hitoshi Sakagami, Masaki Hashida, Tomas Mocek, Shuji Sakabe, Masahiro Shimizu, Jiri Limpouch, Takaya Nishii, and Laura Gemini
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Materials science ,business.industry ,Waves in plasmas ,Plasma ,Grating ,Laser ,Fluence ,Molecular physics ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,law.invention ,Optics ,law ,Femtosecond ,Irradiation ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,Instrumentation ,Beam (structure) - Abstract
The formation of periodic grating structures has been demonstrated on a titanium surface irradiated by a double-pulse beam with a time delay of 160 fs. The first-pulse fluence FPP was varied and always kept below the threshold FTH = 60 mJ/cm 2 for forming periodic grating structures on Ti and the delayed pulse fluence FLP was kept above FTH. The grating structure interspaces were 0.5λL to 0.85λL and decreased with FPP for all values of FLP. This tendency suggests that variation in surface plasma density, which is associated with the fluence of the first pulse, led to variation of the grating interspaces. We found that the interspaces produced by double-pulse irradiation agreed relatively well with those produced by single-pulse irradiation and those predicted by a parametric decay model. To visualize the surface plasma wave induced by the femtosecond laser, two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulation was conducted for a preformed plasma on a metal. The simulation results suggest that the preformed plasma density led to the variation in the grating interspaces.
- Published
- 2014
23. Study of fast ignition target design for ignition and burning experiments
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Tomoyuki Johzaki, K. Mima, Masayasu Hata, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Takashi Asahina, Hitoshi Sakagami, and Hideo Nagatomo
- Subjects
Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Materials science ,Scale (ratio) ,Nuclear engineering ,Phase (waves) ,Implosion ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Laser ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,law.invention ,Ignition system ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Area density ,010306 general physics ,Inertial confinement fusion ,Energy (signal processing) - Abstract
For the fast ignition of laser fusion, a reliable target design is required for an ignition scale target. This paper shows the first optimized target design for the implosion phase of fast ignition, which is scalable to larger targets. The requirements from the heating process are taken account. In conclusion, a target can be highly compressed using multi-step laser pulse irradiation to a solid spherical target with an inserted gold cone. In an 8 kJ scale implosion, the maximum areal density of deuterium–tritium fuel reaches 0.39 g cm−2 according to 2D simulation results, which is 62% of the case without the cone. Based on the similarity rule, we estimate that the requirement of the implosion laser energy for ignition scale targets (ρR max =1.0 g cm−2) is 135 kJ.
- Published
- 2019
24. A spherical shell pellet injection system for repetitive laser engagement
- Author
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Hitoshi Sakagami, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Shinichiro Okihara, Osamu Komeda, Ryohei Hanayama, Yasuhiko Nishimura, Akifumi Iwamoto, Eisuke Miura, Atsushi Sunahara, Yoshitaka Mori, Katsuhiro Ishii, Tomoyoshi Motohiro, Tatsumi Hioki, and Y. Kitagawa
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Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Pellets ,Shell (structure) ,Implosion ,Fusion power ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Laser ,01 natural sciences ,Spherical shell ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,law.invention ,Optics ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Pellet ,Neutron source ,010306 general physics ,business - Abstract
In laser-driven inertial fusion energy reactors, injected fuel pellets are continuously delivered into the reaction chamber and irradiated by laser beams injected at a frequency of tens of hertz. Thus far, a spherical shell pellet has been confirmed as the most conventional target design to achieve high-energy-density state thorough an implosion process that is required for fusion burn. To demonstrate repetitive fuel implosion with a 1 Hz joule-class laser system, a testbed of a shell injection system delivering a spherical shell (500 m diameter and 7 m thickness) was developed. The developed testbed demonstrated that (i) repetitive implosion (maximum frequency: 0.5 Hz) of shell injection was possible for more than ten shells at a shell speed of 191 mm s−1, and (ii) the distribution of the injected shell after 18 cm free-fall was within a circular region, 6.4 mm in diameter. The estimated laser-hit-ratio to the pellet was on the order of 10%.
- Published
- 2019
25. Effects of laser profiles on fast electron generation under the same laser energy
- Author
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Tomoyuki Johzaki, Masayasu Hata, Hitoshi Sakagami, and Hideo Nagatomo
- Subjects
Materials science ,Active laser medium ,business.industry ,Physics::Optics ,Laser pumping ,Electron ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Laser ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,law.invention ,X-ray laser ,Ignition system ,Optics ,law ,Ultrafast laser spectroscopy ,High harmonic generation ,Physics::Atomic Physics ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business - Abstract
In fast ignition, optimization of laser profile for core heating is one approach to ignite the core. However, the profile is not so optimized and its effects on fast electron characteristics are not fully clarified yet. The laser profile is optimized under the condition of same laser energy because laser energy is restricted in experiments. Therefore, we investigate effects of laser profile on fast electron generation under the condition of same laser energy. In this paper, each effect of laser temporal and spatial profile is estimated independently using two-dimensional Particle-In-Cell simulations. We conclude that lower intensity laser suitable for fast ignition under the limit of simulated parameters when energy of laser is same because efficient core-heating electrons are much generated and divergence angle is smaller in low-intensity case compared to high-intensity case.
- Published
- 2013
26. Oscillationless Explicit Method on Overset Grid for Advective Equation
- Author
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Takeshi Sugimura and Hitoshi Sakagami
- Subjects
Classical mechanics ,Wave propagation ,Advection ,Computer science ,Oscillation ,Dispersion relation ,Mathematical analysis ,Phase (waves) ,Polygon mesh ,Phase velocity ,Physics::Geophysics ,Interpolation - Abstract
2Characteristics of numerical errors using the overset grid method are investigated. The overset grid method has some problems with the interpolation of data between each mesh. In the case of the computing advective equation, a traveling wave passing through an interface of overlapping meshes causes numerical oscillations. The oscillations near the interface destroy the solution, and cause overflow. In order to investigate the causes of the numerical errors on the overset grid, we apply wave analysis on each component mesh. We show that phase differences between component meshes cause the numerical errors and that the accuracy of the phase velocity is quite important to compute the advective equation with less numerical errors on the overset grid. We suggest that calculations using accurate phase velocity will reduce numerical errors. We show that CIP scheme is one of the most useful schemes to represent wave propagation with high accuracy and without oscillation on the overset grid.
- Published
- 2013
27. Orientation of periodic grating structures controlled by double-pulse irradiation
- Author
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Yasuhiro Miyasaka, Masahiro Shimizu, Takaya Nishii, Masaki Hashida, Shunsuke Inoue, Shuji Sakabe, and Hitoshi Sakagami
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Range (particle radiation) ,Materials science ,Waves in plasmas ,business.industry ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Laser ,01 natural sciences ,Fluence ,law.invention ,Pulse (physics) ,Orientation (vector space) ,Optics ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,General Materials Science ,Irradiation ,Atomic physics ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Beam (structure) - Abstract
The formation of laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS) is demonstrated on a titanium surface irradiated by a double-pulse beam cross-polarized at time delays from Δτ = 0–1 ps. The first-pulse fluence F 1 and the delayed pulse fluence F 2 are kept below the formation threshold F TH = 65 mJ/cm2 of the periodic grating structure on Ti. We find that periodic grating structures with LIPSS orientation of 45° relative to both polarizations are produced at delay times of 0 and 120 fs. To control LIPSS orientation, a double-pulse beam with a time delay of 0 fs is demonstrated in which a beam composed of a first pulse maintaining constant fluence of F 1 = 70 mJ/cm2 and a delayed pulse varying from F 2 = 0–70 mJ/cm2. The LIPSS orientations are in a range of 0°–45° and decrease as the normalized fluence F 2/F 1 decreases. We find that the orientation of LIPSS produced by double-pulse irradiations is in relatively good agreement with the direction obtained by the vector sum of laser fields $$E_{1}^{4}$$ and $$E_{2}^{4}$$ . This tendency suggests that a multi-photon process at the metal surface might characterize the LIPSS orientation.
- Published
- 2016
28. The formation mechanism of the periodic nanograting structure by the Weibel instability
- Author
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T. Ogata, Masaki Hashida, A. M. Gouda, Shuji Sakabe, and Hitoshi Sakagami
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Physics ,business.industry ,Time evolution ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,Plasma ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Laser ,01 natural sciences ,Molecular physics ,law.invention ,Magnetic field ,Weibel instability ,Wavelength ,Optics ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,General Materials Science ,Particle-in-cell ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Current density - Abstract
The two-dimensional particle in cell code has been used to demonstrated the formation mechanism for the periodic nanograting structure using 500-fs pulses of an ultra-fast laser with wavelength 800 nm, incidence angle 0°, linearly-polarized, and intensity 1018 W/cm2 µm2 in hydrogen plasma. The periodic nanograting structure has been clearly self-organized at the boundary between the preformed plasma and the dense plasma at t = 250 fs. By time evolution of the magnetic field and the current density in the dense plasma, it has been found that the Weibel instability plays a significant role to form the periodic nanograting structure.
- Published
- 2016
29. Integrated simulation of magnetic-field-assist fast ignition laser fusion
- Author
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D. Ajimi, Y. Kai, Atsushi Sunahara, Hideo Nagatomo, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Akifumi Yogo, Kunioki Mima, Shinsuke Fujioka, Toshihiro Taguchi, Hitoshi Sakagami, Masayasu Hata, Yasunobu Arikawa, H. Shiraga, T. Isoda, Tomoyuki Johzaki, Hiroshi Azechi, and Takuma Endo
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Materials science ,business.industry ,Implosion ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Electron ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Magnetic field ,law.invention ,Magnetic mirror ,Ignition system ,Plasma Physics (physics.plasm-ph) ,Optics ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Relativistic electron beam ,010306 general physics ,business ,Heating efficiency ,Inertial confinement fusion - Abstract
To enhance the core heating efficiency in fast ignition laser fusion, the concept of relativistic electron beam guiding by external magnetic fields was evaluated by integrated simulations for FIREX class targets. For the cone-attached shell target case, the core heating performance is deteriorated by applying magnetic fields since the core is considerably deformed and the most of the fast electrons are reflected due to the magnetic mirror formed through the implosion. On the other hand, in the case of cone-attached solid ball target, the implosion is more stable under the kilo-tesla-class magnetic field. In addition, feasible magnetic field configuration is formed through the implosion. As the results, the core heating efficiency becomes double by magnetic guiding. The dependence of core heating properties on the heating pulse shot timing was also investigated for the solid ball target., Comment: 9pages, 12 figures, submitted to Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
30. Integrated experiments of fast ignition targets by Gekko-XII and LFEX lasers
- Author
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Koji Tsubakimoto, Takeshi Watari, K. Sawai, Ryosuke Kodama, Hitoshi Sakagami, Masakatsu Murakami, Mayuko Koga, Kazuo Tanaka, Takahiro Nagai, Y. Fujii, T. Kawasaki, H. Kikuchi, Takayoshi Norimatsu, J. Kawanaka, S. Matsuo, Y. Ishii, Mitsuo Nakai, T. Ozaki, Hirotaka Nakamura, K. Mima, Ko. Kondo, Toshihiko Shimizu, Yasunobu Arikawa, Takahisa Jitsuno, Atsushi Sunahara, S. Ohira, K. Tsuji, Yoichi Sakawa, Hiroyuki Shiraga, Minoru Tanabe, N. Miyanaga, Hideo Nagatomo, Toshihiro Taguchi, Tomoyuki Johzaki, Hiroaki Nishimura, Y. Fujimoto, Akifumi Iwamoto, T. Iwawaki, N. Morio, T. Kanabe, Hideaki Habara, T. Namimoto, H. Hosoda, K. Shimada, Hiroshi Azechi, Nobuhiko Sarukura, H. Murakami, T. Sogo, H. Homma, O. Maegawa, Yoshiki Nakata, Keisuke Shigemori, Shinsuke Fujioka, Keiichi Sueda, and Zhe Zhang
- Subjects
Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Radiation ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Implosion ,Plasma ,Laser ,law.invention ,Ignition system ,Optics ,law ,Plasma diagnostics ,Neutron ,Atomic physics ,business ,Inertial confinement fusion ,Beam (structure) - Abstract
Implosion and heating experiments at the Institute of Laser Engineering, Osaka University on Fast Ignition (FI) targets for the FIREX-1 project have been performed with Gekko-XII laser for implosions and LFEX laser for heating. We tried to reduce the prepulse level in the LFEX laser system and have improved the plasma diagnostics to observe the plasma in the harsh hard X-ray environment. A plastic (CD) shell target, 7-μm thick and 500 μm in diameter with a hollow gold cone was used in this experiment to guide the short-pulse laser at the time of the maximum compression. The shell target was imploded with 9 or 12 beams of Gekko-XII laser (527 nm) with energy of 300 J/beam in a 1.5 ns pulse. Two of the four LFEX laser (1053 nm) beams were injected into the inside bottom of the cone with an energy up to 0.7 kJ/beam in a 1.5 ps pulse at the time around the maximum implosion. We have observed neutron enhancement up to 3.5 × 107 with total heating energy of 300 J, which is higher than the yield obtained in the previous experiment in 2002 [R. Kodama et al. Nature 418, 933 (2002)]. We found the estimated heating efficiency is at a level of 10–20%. Fuel heating to 5 keV is expected when the full output of LFEX is used.
- Published
- 2012
31. Effects of CH foam preplasma on fast ignition
- Author
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Atsushi Sunahara, Masayasu Hata, Hitoshi Sakagami, Tomoyuki Johzaki, and Hideo Nagatomo
- Subjects
Ignition system ,Materials science ,law ,Cathode ray ,Plasma ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Radiation ,Core temperature ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Laser ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,law.invention ,Computational physics - Abstract
Creation of a preformed plasma (preplasma) by heating laser prepulse is crucial to fast ignition. Because it is difficult to control the prepulse and preplasma, control of fast electron beam generation by low-density foam was recently reported. However, this simulation study ignored the foam preplasma. Therefore, we calculated foam preplasma formation using a hydrodynamic code and investigated the effects of the preplasma on fast ignition by using integrated simulations, including radiation hydrodynamic, Particle-In-Cell (PIC) and Fokker–Planck simulations. We conclude that the average core temperature decreased by approximately 10% in the integrated simulations of the foam preplasma case.
- Published
- 2012
32. Effects of long rarefied plasma on fast electron generation for FIREX-I targets
- Author
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Atsushi Sunahara, Tomoyuki Johzaki, Hideo Nagatomo, and Hitoshi Sakagami
- Subjects
Materials science ,Cone-guided target ,Integrated simulation ,Electron ,Plasma ,Fast ignition ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Laser ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,law.invention ,Core (optical fiber) ,Fast electron ,Core electron ,law ,Cathode ray ,Irradiation ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Thin film ,Atomic physics - Abstract
Long-scale preformed plasmas are generated inside the cone by the pre-pulse of the heating laser in the cone-guided fast ignition scheme and it is found that coupling efficiency from the heating laser to fast electrons especially suitable for core heating is drastically reduced by the preformed plasmas. To mitigate this serious problem, an extremely thin film is suggested to cover the entrance of the cone. This method, however, introduces long rarefied plasmas around the entrance of the cone and the main pulse must propagate through these plasmas. Therefore, fast electron characteristics produced by the main pulse could be affected, and effects of long rarefied plasmas on fast electron generation are investigated. It is found that the electron beam intensity becomes larger than that without the rarefied plasma, but the energy coupling rate from the heating laser to the core decreases due to lack of appropriate electrons for core heating. To achieve less than 10% degradation of the core electron temperature, the thin film must be expanded by irradiation of the pre-pulse so that the length and the density of rarefied plasmas become less than 500 µm and one-tenth of the critical density. A thickness of the thin film can be determined by these criteria and the intensity of the pre-pulse.
- Published
- 2011
33. Present states and future prospect of fast ignition realization experiment (FIREX) with Gekko and LFEX Lasers at ILE
- Author
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Atsushi Sunahara, O. Motojima, Akifumi Iwamoto, Yasushi Fujimoto, Tomoyuki Johzaki, Mitsutaka Isobe, Keisuke Shigemori, Yasunobu Arikawa, Shinsuke Fujioka, Hong-bo Cai, Ryosuke Kodama, K. A. Tanaka, Hiroshi Azechi, H. Homma, M. H. Key, Hideaki Takabe, J. Kawanaka, Yasuyuki Nakao, K. Mima, H. Habara, Mayuko Koga, N. Miyanaga, Yoshiki Nakata, Toshihiko Shimizu, Toshiyuki Mito, Hiroaki Nishimura, Hideo Nagatomo, T. Tsubakimoto, Nobuhiko Sarukura, Mitsuo Nakai, Hirotaka Nakamura, Hiroyuki Shiraga, T. Ozaki, Peter Norreys, Takayoshi Norimatsu, Takahisa Jitsuno, Toshihiro Taguchi, Y. Hironaka, H. Hosoda, Takeshi Watari, T. Tanimoto, John Pasley, Yoichi Sakawa, Hitoshi Sakagami, Minoru Tanabe, and M. Murakami
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,business.industry ,Short pulse laser ,Implosion ,Laser ,law.invention ,Pulse (physics) ,Ignition system ,Optics ,law ,Coupling efficiency ,business ,Instrumentation ,Realization (systems) ,Pulse-width modulation - Abstract
The fast ignition realization experiment (FIREX) project is progressing. The new short pulse laser system, LFEX laser, has been completely assembled and one of the four beamlets is now in operation. A fast-ignition experiment was performed using this single short pulse combined with the Gekko XII implosion laser. The energy of the GXII implosion laser was about 2 kJ and the pulse width was 1.5 ns. The energy of the LFEX laser was increased upto 800 J and two pulse durations 5 and 1.6 ps were compared. Targets were deuterated plastic shells with gold cones. It was found that the neutron yield was increased by a factor of 30 as a result of the fast electron-induced heating in LFEX 1.6 ps shot. The estimated coupling efficiency between the LFEX laser pulse and the compressed fuel was low (less than 5%). This may be due to pre-plasma formed by light arriving at the target before the main laser pulse. Further investigations and attempts to overcome these problems are now in progress. © 2011 Elsevier B.V.
- Published
- 2011
34. Production of intense, pulsed, and point-like neutron source from deuterated plastic cavity by mono-directional kilo-joule laser irradiation
- Author
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Yasunobu Arikawa, Takao Nagai, Katsunobu Nishihara, T. Ikenouchi, Hiroaki Nishimura, Atsushi Sunahara, T. Kawashima, Takeshi Watari, Yuki Abe, Hitoshi Sakagami, Hiroshi Azechi, Shinsuke Fujioka, Nakahiro Satoh, Takayoshi Norimatsu, T. Yanagawa, S. Tosaki, K. Mima, Sadaoki Kojima, Mitsuo Nakai, Seung Ho Lee, Alessio Morace, Hiroyuki Shiraga, S. Sakata, Zhe Zhang, and Akifumi Yogo
- Subjects
Thermonuclear fusion ,Materials science ,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,business.industry ,Physics::Optics ,Hot spot (veterinary medicine) ,Laser ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,law.invention ,Optics ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Physics::Accelerator Physics ,Nuclear fusion ,Neutron source ,Neutron ,Irradiation ,010306 general physics ,business ,Beam (structure) - Abstract
This paper reports an experimental investigation of a scheme to produce an intense, pulsed, point-like, and quasi-monoenergy neutron source. In this scheme, the inner wall of a deuterated plastic spherical cavity is mono-directionally irradiated by a 2.4 kJ laser beam through an open-tip gold cone inserted into the cavity. The whole inner wall of the cavity is illuminated by laser light owing to multiple laser reflections, and the laser-ablated plasma stagnates near the center of the cavity, at which a several keV hot spot is generated. Thermonuclear and beam D-D fusion reactions occur in the hot spot. We have demonstrated the neutron yield exceeding 107 neutrons per pulse from a
- Published
- 2017
35. Temperature Control in a Cryogenic Target with a Conical Laser Guide for Fuel Layering
- Author
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Takeshi Fujimura, O. Motojima, Ryuji Maekawa, Hitoshi Sakagami, Mitsuo Nakai, Hiroshi Azechi, Akifumi Iwamoto, Keiji Nagai, Toshiyuki Mito, Takayoshi Norimatsu, and Kunioki Mima
- Subjects
Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Temperature control ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Mechanical Engineering ,Conical surface ,Laser ,law.invention ,Optics ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,law ,General Materials Science ,Layering ,business ,Civil and Structural Engineering - Abstract
Fuel layering of a cryogenic target with a conical laser guide such as the FIREX target is complicated because of its non-spherical symmetry appearance. To simplify the layering, a foam layer is pl...
- Published
- 2009
36. Generation and confinement of high energy electrons generated by irradiation of ultra-intense short laser pulses onto cone targets
- Author
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Hitoshi Sakagami, Tuto Nakamura, K. Mima, Hideo Nagatomo, and Tomoyuki Johzaki
- Subjects
High energy ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Energy coupling ,Electron ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Laser ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,law.invention ,Optics ,Cone (topology) ,law ,Electric field ,Ligand cone angle ,Irradiation ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Atomic physics ,business - Abstract
Interactions of cone targets with different shapes with laser pulses are studied numerically. Two important parameters which characterize the laser-cone interaction in 2006 are introduced, which are cone angle and ratio of laser spot and cone tip. By changing these two parameters, energy coupling from laser to electrons is controlled. Some fraction of high energy electrons generated at side wall and cone tip are not freely propagating out from the target, but confined around the cone tip due to the disturbed electric field.
- Published
- 2008
37. Development of a Cryogenic Target for the 'Fast Ignition Realization Experiment'-Technique for measuring the fuel layer using an interferometer
- Author
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H. Homma, Mitsuo Nakai, Kunioki Mima, Keiji Nagai, Takayoshi Norimatsu, Akifumi Iwamoto, Takeshi Fujimura, H. Yang, and Hitoshi Sakagami
- Subjects
Materials science ,business.industry ,Shell (structure) ,Cryogenics ,Interference (wave propagation) ,law.invention ,Ignition system ,Interferometry ,Optics ,law ,Hydrogen fuel ,Aerospace engineering ,business ,Realization (systems) ,Layer (electronics) - Abstract
Measurement techniques have been developed to characterize form shell targets for the Fast Iginition Realization Experiment (FIREX) project. Interferometry has been adopted to determine the volume of hydrogen fuel in the form shell. A preliminary experiment has been conducted to evaluate the aplicability of interferometry. The paper describes the measurement techniques and discuesses its accuracies.
- Published
- 2008
38. Holistic Simulation for FIREX Project with FI3
- Author
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Tomoyuki Johzaki, Hideo Nagatomo, Kunioki Mima, and Hitoshi Sakagami
- Subjects
Materials science ,Scale (ratio) ,Plasma ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Laser ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Pulse (physics) ,law.invention ,Ion ,Computational physics ,Core (optical fiber) ,Ignition system ,law ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Intensity (heat transfer) - Abstract
In fast ignition research, the clarification of core heating mechanism is one of the most critical issues. To understand and identify the crucial physics in fast heating, we developed the fast ignition integrated interconnecting code FI3 and carried out the core heating simulations for fast heating experiments with cone-guided targets. It was found that the scale length of the pre-plasma at the inner-surface of the cone and the density gap at the contact surface between the cone tip and the imploded core plasma strongly affect the efficiency of core heating. In the case of heating laser with intensity of 1020 W/cm2 and duration of 1 ps, the pre-plasma scale length of 1.5 µm is optimum for the core heating; the dense core is heated up to 0.86 keV. In the double scale length case (long scale of ~5 µm in underdense region and short scale of ~ 1 µm in overdense region), of which generation due to the pre-pulse irradiation of heating pulse is observed at the radiation–hydro simulations, the dense core is heated more efficiently than single short scale length cases. The contribution of fast ions to the core heating is also discussed.
- Published
- 2007
39. Preliminary Results of Fuel Layering on the Cryogenic Target for the FIREX Project
- Author
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A. Iwamoto, Takayoshi Norimatsu, Takeshi Fujimura, Toshiyuki Mito, K. Mima, O. Motojima, M. Nakai, Ryuji Maekawa, Hitoshi Sakagami, Hiroshi Azechi, and Keiji Nagai
- Subjects
Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Materials science ,Chemical substance ,Mechanical Engineering ,Shell (structure) ,law.invention ,Liquid fuel ,Ignition system ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,law ,Shell integration ,General Materials Science ,Composite material ,Layering ,Inertial confinement fusion ,Layer (electronics) ,Civil and Structural Engineering - Abstract
The fuel layering process of a cryogenic target for the Fast Ignition Realization EXperiment (FIREX) project has been studied. A foam shell method is proposed as a fuel layering technique for this target design. The difficulty of the fuel layering comes from the aspherical target symmetry. In the case of the foam shell method, liquid fuel is directly infiltrated into a foam shell though a fuel feeder and is soaked up into the foam layer by capillarity. The fuel is then solidified and an ideal cryogenic target is formed. To date, the cryogenic system for the demonstration of the fuel layering was fabricated and subsequently modified to improve its cool-down performance. A dummy foam target has been utilized to study the fuel layering process using H 2 instead of D 2 and DT fuels. Liquid H 2 is supplied into the shell through a feeder with a 20 μm inner tip diameter. The solid H 2 quantity remaining in the shell was controlled by regulating both H 2 pressure and target temperature during solidification.
- Published
- 2007
40. Slowdown mechanisms of ultraintense laser propagation in critical density plasma
- Author
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Hitoshi Sakagami, Hideaki Habara, Toshinori Yabuuchi, Kazuo Tanaka, Masayasu Hata, and T. Iwawaki
- Subjects
Physics ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,law ,Slowdown ,Front (oceanography) ,Electron flow ,Plasma ,Laser ,law.invention ,Computational physics - Abstract
We use one- and two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations to demonstrate that the propagation of an ultraintense laser (I=10(19)W/cm(2)) in critical density plasma can be interfered with by a high density plasma wall region generated at the propagation front. When the electron flow speed of the wall region exceeds a certain relativistic threshold, the region behaves as an overdense plasma due to a decrease of the effective critical density. The region forms then very small overdense plasma islands. The islands impede the propagation intermittently and slow down the propagation speed significantly.
- Published
- 2015
41. Heating efficiency evaluation with mimicking plasma conditions of integrated fast-ignition experiment
- Author
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Hitoshi Sakagami, Junji Kawanaka, Hiroaki Inoue, Yoshiki Nakata, T. Ikenouchi, Yuki Abe, S. Lee, Yasushi Fujimoto, Hideo Nagatomo, Keisuke Shigemori, Noriaki Miyanaga, Alessio Morace, Youichiro Hironaka, Shinsuke Fujioka, Atsushi Sunahara, Yasunobu Arikawa, Tetsuo Ozaki, Sadaoki Kojima, Takahisa Jitsuno, Mitsuo Nakai, Zhe Zhang, Kunioki Mima, Takayoshi Norimatsu, Tatsuya Hosoda, S Hattori, Masaru Utsugi, Tomoyuki Johzaki, Hiroaki Nishimura, Hiroshi Azechi, H. Shiraga, Shigeki Tokita, Takahiro Nagai, Kohei Yamanoi, and Shohei Sakata
- Subjects
Fusion ,Materials science ,Nuclear engineering ,Electron ,Plasma ,Laser ,Physics::Geophysics ,law.invention ,Ignition system ,Core (optical fiber) ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,law ,Energy transformation ,Inertial confinement fusion - Abstract
A series of experiments were carried out to evaluate the energy-coupling efficiency from heating laser to a fuel core in the fast-ignition scheme of laser-driven inertial confinement fusion. Although the efficiency is determined by a wide variety of complex physics, from intense laser plasma interactions to the properties of high-energy density plasmas and the transport of relativistic electron beams (REB), here we simplify the physics by breaking down the efficiency into three measurable parameters: (i) energy conversion ratio from laser to REB, (ii) probability of collision between the REB and the fusion fuel core, and (iii) fraction of energy deposited in the fuel core from the REB. These three parameters were measured with the newly developed experimental platform designed for mimicking the plasma conditions of a realistic integrated fast-ignition experiment. The experimental results indicate that the high-energy tail of REB must be suppressed to heat the fuel core efficiently.
- Published
- 2015
42. Core heating analysis of fast ignition targets by integrated simulations
- Author
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K. Mima, Hideo Nagatomo, Tomoyuki Johzaki, Yasuyuki Nakao, T. Yokota, Hitoshi Sakagami, Yasuhiko Sentoku, and Tatsufumi Nakamura
- Subjects
Physics ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Electron ,Fusion power ,Computational physics ,law.invention ,Core (optical fiber) ,Ignition system ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,law ,Coulomb ,Fokker–Planck equation ,Statistical physics ,Dense core - Abstract
A coupled PIC and Fokker-Planck hierarchical simulation model for analysis of fast ignition core heating was checked by comparing the heating profile with collisional PIC simulations. The integrated simulations using FI 3 code were carried out for the recent fast heating experiments and showed that the dense core (ρ > 10 g/cc) is heated up to 0.45 keV by the fast electrons via the Coulomb interactions (not anomalous processes).
- Published
- 2006
43. Hot electron generation by laser-cone interaction
- Author
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Tomoyuki Johzaki, Tatsufumi Nakamura, K. Mima, Hideo Nagatomo, and Hitoshi Sakagami
- Subjects
Physics ,Field (physics) ,Plane (geometry) ,business.industry ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Electron ,Fusion power ,Laser ,law.invention ,Acceleration ,Optics ,Cone (topology) ,law ,Irradiation ,Atomic physics ,business - Abstract
The hot electron generation by irradiation of intense short laser pulses onto cone targets is studied by using 2D PIC simulation. It is shown that the high energy electrons from the cone target are characterized with three effective temprature, while two-temperature for plane target. The electrons composing most energetic component are generated at the cone tip where laser field is intensified by cone-guiding, and electrons for middle component are generated at cone wing which is not observed for plane target. The acceleration processes at cone wing, cone tip, and rear surface are explained.
- Published
- 2006
44. Generation and transport of fast electrons inside cone targets irradiated by intense laser pulses
- Author
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Kunioki Mima, Tomoyuki Johzaki, Hitoshi Sakagami, Hideo Nagatomo, and Tatsufumi Nakamura
- Subjects
Physics ,business.industry ,Plasma ,Electron ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Laser ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,law.invention ,Magnetic field ,Core (optical fiber) ,Weibel instability ,Optics ,law ,Electric field ,Cathode ray ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Atomic physics ,business - Abstract
Fast electrons are effectively generated from solid targets of cone-geometry by irradiating intense laser pulses, which is applied to fast ignition scheme. For realizing optimal core heating by those electrons, understanding the characteristics of electrons emitted from cone targets is crucial. In this paper, in order to understand the generation and transport processes of hot electrons inside the cone target, two-dimensional (2D) particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations were carried out. It is shown that hot electrons form current layers which are guided by self-generated surface magnetic field, which results in effective energy transfer from laser pulse to hot electrons. When the hot electrons propagate through the steep density gradient at the cone tip, electrostatic field is induced via Weibel instability. As a result, hot electrons are confined inside and emitted gradually from the target, as an electron beam of long duration. Energy spectrum and temporal profile of hot electrons are also evaluated at the rear side of the target, where the profile of rear side plasma is taken from the fluid code and the result is sent to Fokker-Planck code.
- Published
- 2006
45. Present Status of Fast Ignition Research and Prospects of FIREX Project
- Author
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Keiji Nagai, Hiroyuki Shiraga, Mitsuo Nakai, Takayoshi Norimatsu, Y. Izawa, Hitoshi Sakagami, Y. Kitagawa, K. A. Tanaka, Y. Johzaki, Ryosuke Kodama, Yasuji Kozaki, Yasuyuki Nakao, Hiroshi Azechi, Hiroaki Nishimura, K. Mima, N. Miyanaga, and Hideo Nagatomo
- Subjects
Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,020209 energy ,Nuclear engineering ,Short pulse laser ,Implosion ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,law.invention ,Optics ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Coupling efficiency ,General Materials Science ,Physics::Atomic Physics ,Inertial confinement fusion ,Civil and Structural Engineering ,Physics ,business.industry ,Mechanical Engineering ,Plasma ,Fusion power ,Laser ,Ignition system ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,business - Abstract
This is the review on the laser fusion research at Institute of Laser Engineering of Osaka University. Since 1996, we have concentrated our efforts on fast ignition laser fusion research. By constructing 100 TW and 1Peta watt lasers, experiments on relativistic laser plasma interactions related to fast ignition and pellet implosion and heating have been carried out. The results indicate that imploded core plasma is heated with relatively high coupling efficiency. According to the above results, we started the FIREX (Fast Ignition Realization Experiment) project for demonstrating ignition and burn with a multi 10kJ short pulse laser. The future prospects of the project are presented in this paper.
- Published
- 2005
46. Interconnection between hydro and PIC codes for fast ignition simulations
- Author
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Hitoshi Sakagami and Kunioki Mima
- Subjects
Physics ,Interconnection ,Process (computing) ,Implosion ,Plasma ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Laser ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,law.invention ,Computational physics ,Ignition system ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,law ,Code (cryptography) ,Particle-in-cell ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering - Abstract
Relativistic laser–plasma interaction, subsequent superhot electron transport, superhot electron energy deposition, and the overall implosion process are key subjects for fast ignition. All these phenomena couple with each other, and more studies by simulations are essential. We have a plan to simulate the whole of fast ignition self-consistently with four individual codes. Four codes are integrated into one big system in the Fast Ignition Integrated Interconnecting code project. In a first stage of this project, we integrate the Arbitrary Lagrangian Eulerian (ALE) hydro code with the collective particle in cell (PIC) code. The PIC code obtains density profile at maximum compression from the ALE hydro code to introduce imploded plasma into a PIC system, and we can simulate interaction between ignition laser and realistic plasma. We have evaluated reflected laser spectrum and electron energy distribution, and found many differences between the realistic plasma profile and the conventional one in PIC simulations.
- Published
- 2004
47. Present Status and Future Prospects of Laser Fusion Research at ILE Osaka University
- Author
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Tomoyuki Johzaki, Hitoshi Sakagami, K. Mima, Katsunobu Nishihara, Hiroshi Azechi, J Sunanara, Hideo Nagatomo, Keiji Nagai, Hiroyuki Shiraga, Yasuhiko Sentoku, Toshihiro Taguchi, Ryosuke Kodama, K. A. Tanaka, N. Miyanaga, Mitsuo Nakai, and T. Norimatu
- Subjects
Physics ,Orders of magnitude (power) ,business.industry ,High density ,Implosion ,Plasma ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Laser ,Neutron temperature ,law.invention ,Ignition system ,Optics ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,law ,business ,Inertial confinement fusion - Abstract
Reviewed are the present status and future prospects of the laser fusion research at the ILE Osaka. The Gekko XII and Peta Watt laser system have been operated for investigating the implosion hydrodynamics, fast ignition, and the relativistic laser plasma interactions and so on. In particular, the fast ignition experiments with cone shell target have been in progress as the UK and US-Japan collaboration programs. In the experiments, the imploded high density plasmas are heated by irradiating 500 J level peta-watt laser pulse. The thermal neutron yield is found to increase by three orders of magnitude by injecting the peta-watt laser into the cone shell target. The Rayleigh-Taylor instability experiment results are also reviewed is this paper.
- Published
- 2004
48. Integration of Individual Simulation Codes for Fast Ignition
- Author
-
Tomoyuki Johzaki, Kunioki Mima, Hitoshi Sakagami, and Hideo Nagatomo
- Subjects
Scheme (programming language) ,Computer science ,Implosion ,law.invention ,Ignition system ,law ,Code (cryptography) ,Lightweight protocol ,Protocol (object-oriented programming) ,computer ,Simulation ,Energy (signal processing) ,Data transmission ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
Overall fluid dynamics of the implosion, laser-plasma interaction and super hot electron generation, and super hot electron energy deposition within the core are key issues in the Fast Ignition scheme. As both time and space scales of these phenomena are much different, it is impossible to simulate all phenomena with one code, and we must simulate each phenomenon with individual codes and integrate them. We will run these codes individually, that are collaborating each other with data transfer via the computer network. Since communication among these codes is very straightforward, we design a lightweight protocol, Distributed Computing Collaboration Protocol (DCCP), to transfer data. We have planned to simulate the Fast Ignition with self consistent fields in a full range of parameters using DCCP and just started challenging Fast Ignition Integrated Interconnecting code project.
- Published
- 2004
49. Advances in Plasma and Fusion Simulation and Prospects for the Future Progress of Laser Fusion Simulations and Network Computing
- Author
-
Katsunobu Nishihara, Hideo Nagatomo, and Hitoshi Sakagami
- Subjects
Scale (ratio) ,Grid computing ,Computer science ,Extreme ultraviolet lithography ,Domain decomposition methods ,Grid ,Supercomputer ,computer.software_genre ,Inertial confinement fusion ,Protocol (object-oriented programming) ,computer ,Computational science - Abstract
Recent progress of large scale simulation study in laser fusion research at Osaka University is briefly reviewed in connection with supercomputer development. Present vector-parallel computers have allowed us to proceed to three-dimensional simulations from two-dimensional ones without any difficulties in both radiation-hydro and particle codes. The molecular dynamic(MD) method used mostly in microscopic simulations can also be applied to large-scale macroscopic simulations. Some simulation results are shown with figures. Various attempts to realize highperformance network computing are also presented, including an application of large scale MD simulations using the Lagrangian Particle D3 (Dynamic Domain Decomposition) method to a supercomputer network connected by Super SINET, as well as to integrated fast ignition simulations with the use of originally developed DCCP (Distributed Computing Collaboration Protocol), and to the EUV (Extreme Ultra Violet) simulation GRID.
- Published
- 2004
50. Prospect for Multiple Time and Spatial Scale Simulation Research of Laser Fusion Plasmas
- Author
-
Hideo Nagatomo, Kunioki Mima, and Hitoshi Sakagami
- Subjects
Physics ,Fusion ,Scale (ratio) ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,law ,Implosion ,Plasma ,Radiation ,Laser ,Inertial confinement fusion ,Computational physics ,Magnetic field ,law.invention - Abstract
Reviewed is the development of the integrated simulation code related to laser fusion plasma research. In particular, the simulation system for describing ultra-intense laser interaction with high density plasmas is discussed. In ultra-intense laser plasma interaction, the relativistic electron current reaches a few hundred mega amperes and generates strong magnetic fields which control the electron transport. Therefore, the simulation system should include particle-in-cell simulation for laser plasma interactions, Fokker-Planck simulation and hybrid simulation for transport and dense plasma heating, and radiation hydrodynamic simulation for laser implosion and fusion burning. This paper reports the present status of the research regarding those simulations and how the above 4 simulation codes are interconnected as parts of the study of multi-space-time scale laser fusion plasma phenomena.
- Published
- 2003
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