The National Ignition Facility 2007 Laser Performance Status

C. A. Haynam, R. A. Sacks, P. J. Wegner, M. W. Bowers,S. N. Dixit,G. V. Erbert, G. M. Heestand, M. A. Henesian,M. R. Hermann, K. S. Jancaitis, K. R. Manes, C. D. Marshall, N. C. Mehta, J. Menapace, M. C. Nostrand, C. D. Orth,M. J. Shaw, S. B. Sutton,W. H. Williams, C. C. Widmayer, R. K. White, S. T. Yang,B. M. Van Wonterghem

5TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INERTIAL FUSION SCIENCES AND APPLICATIONS (IFSA2007)(2008)

引用 21|浏览71
暂无评分
摘要
The National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory contains a 192-beam 3.6 MJ neodymium glass laser that is frequency converted to 351nm light. It has been designed to support high energy density science (HEDS), including the demonstration of fusion ignition through Inertial Confinement. To meet this goal, laser design criteria include the ability to generate pulses of up to 1.8-MJ total energy at 351nm, with peak power of 500 TW and precisely-controlled temporal pulse shapes spanning two orders of magnitude. The focal spot fluence distribution of these pulses is conditioned, through a combination of special optics in the 1 omega (1053 nm) portion of the laser (continuous phase plates), smoothing by spectral dispersion (SSD), and the overlapping of multiple beams with orthogonal polarization (polarization smoothing).In 2006 and 2007, a series of measurements were performed on the NIF laser, at both 1 omega and 3 omega (351 nm). When scaled to full 192-beam operation, these results lend confidence to the claim that NIF will meet its laser performance design criteria and that it will be able to simultaneously deliver the temporal pulse shaping, focal spot conditioning, peak power, shot-to-shot reproducibility, and power balance requirements of indirect-drive fusion ignition campaigns. We discuss the plans and status of NIF's commissioning, and the nature and results of these measurement campaigns.
更多
查看译文
关键词
pulse shaping
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要