Publications by authors named "J Frenje"

CR-39 proton radiography is an experimental charged-particle backlighter platform fielded and used at OMEGA and the NIF to image electric and magnetic fields in a subject plasma. Processing a piece of CR-39 involves etching it in hot NaOH, and the etch time can greatly impact the background-to-signal ratio (BSR) in low-fluence (≲4 × 104 cm-2) regions and detection efficiency in high-fluence regions (≳7 × 105 cm-2). For CR-39 data with high fluence variation, these effects mean that any single etch time will result in ≳15% error in the measured signal in either the high- or low-fluence regions.

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The SPARC tokamak is a high-field, Bt0 ∼12 T, medium-sized, R0 = 1.85 m, tokamak that is presently under construction in Devens, MA, led by Commonwealth Fusion Systems. It will be used to de-risk the high-field tokamak path to a fusion power plant and demonstrate the commercial viability of fusion energy.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Measurement of proton spectra is crucial for high energy density physics experiments, but existing diagnostics struggle with low-energy protons and high debris scenarios.
  • - A new compact magnetic spectrometer called MagSpec was created to specifically measure proton spectra in the 1-20 MeV range, focusing on the low-energy range of 1-6 MeV for use at facilities like OMEGA and NIF.
  • - The MagSpec works by dispersing protons of various energies through a magnetic field, allowing for a spatial distribution of CR-39 tracks that reflects the energy spectrum, and the paper details its design and implementation.
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Neutron measurement is the primary tool in the SPARC tokamak for fusion power (Pfus) monitoring, research on the physics of burning plasmas, validation of the neutronics simulation workflows, and providing feedback for machine protection. A demanding target uncertainty (10% for Pfus) and coverage of a wide dynamic range (>8 orders of magnitude going up to 5 × 1019 n/s), coupled with a fast-track timeline for design and deployment, make the development of the SPARC neutron diagnostics challenging. Four subsystems are under design that exploit the high flux of direct DT and DD plasma neutrons emanating from a shielded opening in a midplane diagnostic port.

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