1. Coupling laser physics to radiation-hydrodynamics.
- Author
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Haines, Brian M., Keller, D.E., Marozas, J.A., McKenty, P.W., Anderson, K.S., Collins, T.J.B., Dai, W.W., Hall, M.L., Jones, S., McKay Jr, M.D., Rauenzahn, R.M., and Woods, D.N.
- Subjects
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INERTIAL confinement fusion , *FORCE & energy , *X-ray lasers , *PHYSICS , *LASERS , *LASER beams - Abstract
• We propose a method for coupling laser physics to radiation-hydrodynamics. • We demonstrate methods to reduce or eliminate spurious noise. • This method is being used for modeling experiments. In order to accurately model implosion hydrodynamics in a radiation-hydrodynamics code, it is essential to include accurate accounting for energy deposition physics. In inertial confinement fusion (ICF), where capsules are driven by lasers or laser-driven x-rays, energy deposition profiles and energy transport have a strong impact on the development and evolution of capsule dynamics and hydrodynamic instabilities. Nevertheless, accurately modeling laser beam propagation in radiation-hydrodynamics codes presents unique challenges associated with disparate resolution requirements, the potential to seed spurious noise in highly unstable systems, and computational expense. We discuss a new method for coupling laser ray-tracing physics to a radiation hydrodynamics code, developed in the process of implementing the Mazinisin laser ray-trace into the xRAGE radiation hydrodynamics code. In contrast to previous approaches, in which laser ray-tracing is performed on the radiation-hydrodynamics mesh, our method involves a mesh generation and evolution strategy that addresses the unique requirements of the laser ray-trace in a separate mesh, enabling performance enhancements and strategies to reduce noise seeded by the discretization of beams into computational rays. In addition, we have employed several methods to ensure that spurious mesh imprinting is minimized. These involved optimizing the laser and radiation-hydrodynamics meshes as well as interpolation between them and requires the use of an exact initialization method for the radiation-hydrodynamics mesh. These techniques have enabled efficient computation of laser-driven implosions and other experiments with minimal introduction of spurious noise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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