Bulletin of the American Physical Society
63rd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 66, Number 13
Monday–Friday, November 8–12, 2021; Pittsburgh, PA
Session KI02: HED/ICF: Plasma Diagnostics
3:00 PM–5:00 PM,
Tuesday, November 9, 2021
Room: Ballroom C
Chair: Carolyn Kuranz, University of Michigan
Abstract: KI02.00004 : Neutron backscatter edges – a novel diagnostic for Inertial Confinement Fusion
4:30 PM–5:00 PM
Presenter:
Aidan C Crilly
(Imperial College London)
Authors:
Aidan C Crilly
(Imperial College London)
Owen M Mannion
(University of Rochester)
Brian Appelbe
(Imperial College London)
Chad Forrest
(University of Rochester)
James P Knauer
(University of Rochester)
Zaarah L Mohamed
(University of Rochester)
Varchas Gopalaswamy
(Lab for Laser Energetics)
Jeremy P Chittenden
(Imperial College London)
The scattered neutron spectrum emitted from an ICF implosion contains a wealth of information about the dense fuel. Neutrons which undergo a single 180° scattering event from D and T ions produce sharp edges in the spectrum. The spectral shapes of the backscatter edges are especially sensitive to the ion velocity distribution. Similar to the DT primary spectrum, thermal and non-thermal broadening and fluid velocity Doppler shifts govern the spectral shape of the backscatter edge. Thus, the backscatter edges provide a unique diagnostic feature to measure the hydrodynamic conditions of the dense fuel at stagnation.
We have developed a model to fully describe the spectral shape of the backscatter edges. The model has been used to fit experimental nT backscatter edge data from cyrogenic implosions performed on the OMEGA 60 laser. This has allowed inference of the bulk flow velocity and total velocity variance of the scattering triton population, providing the first direct measurement of dense fuel conditions. The deviation in experimental measurements from 1D predictions are correlated with hydrodynamic measures of shell stability. Separation of thermal and non-thermal effects can be achieved through simultaneous measurement of the nD and nT edges. In combination with measurements of the hotspot conditions, this will enable a more complete description of the stagnating capsule and provide insights into current implosion performance.
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