Recent progress at the National Ignition Facility (NIF), with neutron yields of order 1 × 10, places new constraints on diagnostics used to characterize implosion performance. The Magnetic Recoil neutron Spectrometer (MRS), which is routinely used to measure yield, ion temperature (T), and down-scatter ratio (dsr), has been adapted to allow measurements of dsr up to 5 × 10, and yield and T up to 2 × 10 in the near term with new data processing techniques and conversion foil solutions. This paper presents a solution for extending MRS operation up to a yield of 2 × 10 (60 MJ) by moving the spectrometer outside of the NIF shield wall.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeutron-yield diagnostics at the NIF have been upgraded to include 48 detectors placed around the NIF target chamber to assess the DT-neutron-yield isotropy for inertial confinement fusion experiments. Real-time neutron-activation detectors are used to understand yield asymmetries due to Doppler shifts in the neutron energy attributed to hotspot motion, variations in the fuel and ablator areal densities, and other physics effects. In order to isolate target physics effects, we must understand the contribution due to neutron scattering associated with the different hardware configurations used for each experiment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Crystal Backlighter Imager (CBI) is a quasi-monochromatic, near-normal incidence, spherically bent crystal imager developed for the National Ignition Facility (NIF), which will allow inertial confinement fusion capsule implosions to be radiographed close to stagnation. This is not possible using the standard pinhole-based area-backlighter configuration, as the self-emission from the capsule hotspot overwhelms the backlighter signal in the final stages of the implosion. The CBI mitigates the broadband self-emission from the capsule hot spot by using the extremely narrow bandwidth inherent to near-normal-incidence Bragg diffraction.
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