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5 result(s) for "Kritcher, Andrea L"
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Ultrafast X-ray Thomson Scattering of Shock-Compressed Matter
Spectrally resolved scattering of ultrafast K-α x-rays has provided experimental validation of the modeling of the compression and heating of shocked matter. The elastic scattering component has characterized the evolution and coalescence of two shocks launched by a nanosecond laser pulse into lithium hydride with an unprecedented temporal resolution of 10 picoseconds. At shock coalescence, we observed rapid heating to temperatures of 25,000 kelvin when the scattering spectra show the collective plasmon oscillations that indicate the transition to the dense metallic plasma state. The plasmon frequency determines the material compression, which is found to be a factor of 3, thereby reaching conditions in the laboratory relevant for studying the physics of planetary formation.
A measurement of the equation of state of carbon envelopes of white dwarfs
White dwarfs represent the final state of evolution for most stars 1 – 3 . Certain classes of white dwarfs pulsate 4 , 5 , leading to observable brightness variations, and analysis of these variations with theoretical stellar models probes their internal structure. Modelling of these pulsating stars provides stringent tests of white dwarf models and a detailed picture of the outcome of the late stages of stellar evolution 6 . However, the high-energy-density states that exist in white dwarfs are extremely difficult to reach and to measure in the laboratory, so theoretical predictions are largely untested at these conditions. Here we report measurements of the relationship between pressure and density along the principal shock Hugoniot (equations describing the state of the sample material before and after the passage of the shock derived from conservation laws) of hydrocarbon to within five per cent. The observed maximum compressibility is consistent with theoretical models that include detailed electronic structure. This is relevant for the equation of state of matter at pressures ranging from 100 million to 450 million atmospheres, where the understanding of white dwarf physics is sensitive to the equation of state and where models differ considerably. The measurements test these equation-of-state relations that are used in the modelling of white dwarfs and inertial confinement fusion experiments 7 , 8 , and we predict an increase in compressibility due to ionization of the inner-core orbitals of carbon. We also find that a detailed treatment of the electronic structure and the electron degeneracy pressure is required to capture the measured shape of the pressure–density evolution for hydrocarbon before peak compression. Our results illuminate the equation of state of the white dwarf envelope (the region surrounding the stellar core that contains partially ionized and partially degenerate non-ideal plasmas), which is a weak link in the constitutive physics informing the structure and evolution of white dwarf stars 9 . Researchers have measured the equation of state of hydrocarbon in a high-density regime, which is necessary for accurate modelling of the oscillations of white dwarf stars.
Simultaneous compression and opacity data from time-series radiography with a Lagrangian marker
Time-resolved radiography can be used to obtain absolute shock Hugoniot states by simultaneously measuring at least two mechanical parameters of the shock, and this technique is particularly suitable for one-dimensional converging shocks where a single experiment probes a range of pressures as the converging shock strengthens. However, at sufficiently high pressures, the shocked material becomes hot enough that the x-ray opacity falls significantly. If the system includes a Lagrangian marker, such that the mass within the marker is known, this additional information can be used to constrain the opacity as well as the Hugoniot state. In the limit that the opacity changes only on shock heating, and not significantly on subsequent isentropic compression, the opacity of shocked material can be determined uniquely. More generally, it is necessary to assume the form of the variation of opacity with isentropic compression, or to introduce multiple marker layers. Alternatively, assuming either the equation of state or the opacity, the presence of a marker layer in such experiments enables the non-assumed property to be deduced more accurately than from the radiographic density reconstruction alone. An example analysis is shown for measurements of a converging shock wave in polystyrene, at the National Ignition Facility.
Improved analysis of converging shock radiographs
We previously reported an experimental platform to induce a spherically-convergent shock in a sample using laser-driven ablation, probed with time-resolved x-ray radiography, and an analysis method to deduce states along the principal shock Hugoniot simultaneously with the x-ray opacity. We have now developed a modified method of analysis that is numerically better-conditioned and faster, and usually provides a better representation of the radiograph with correspondingly lower uncertainties. The previous approach was based on optimizing parameters in a model of the density distribution as a function of radius and time, warped to follow loci such as the shock and the outside of the sample. The converging shock configuration can be described more efficiently in terms of the shocked density and sound speed, expressed as functions of the shock speed Studies of the Hugoniot from various theoretical equations of state (EOS) indicate that, in the typical range of states explored by these experiments, these functions can be described by low-order polynomials. Similarly, few-parameter functions were found suitable for representing the variation of x-ray opacity with shock pressure. This approach was found to perform better in most cases than an alternative method based on parameterization of the EOS.
Shock Hugoniot of diamond from 3 to 80 TPa
The principal Hugoniot of carbon, initially diamond, was measured from 3 to 80 TPa (30 to 800 million atmospheres), the highest pressure ever achieved, using radiography of spherically-converging shocks. The shocks were generated by ablation of a plastic coating by soft x-rays in a laser-heated hohlraum at the National Ignition Facility (NIF). Experiments were performed with low and high drive powers, spanning different but overlapping pressure ranges. The radius-time history of the shock, and the profile of mass density behind, were determined by profile-matching from a time-resolved x-ray radiograph across the diameter of the sphere. Above ~50 TPa, the heating induced by the shock was great enough to ionize a significant fraction of K-shell electrons, reducing the opacity to the 10.2 keV probe x-rays. The opacity and mass density were deduced simultaneously using the constraint that the total mass of the sample was constant. The Hugoniot and opacity were consistent with density functional theory calculations of the electronic states and equation of state (EOS), and varied significantly from theoretical Hugoniots based on Thomas-Fermi theory. Theoretical models used to predict the compressibility of diamond ablator experiments at the NIF, producing the highest neutron yields so far from inertial confinement fusion experiments, are qualitatively consistent with our EOS measurements but appear to overpredict the compressibility slightly. These measurements help to evaluate theoretical techniques and constrain wide-range EOS models applicable to white dwarf stars, which are the ultimate evolutionary form of at least 97% of stars in the galaxy.