Structures of strong shocks in low-density helium and neon gases.

Phys Rev E

Center for Energy Research and Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093, USA.

Published: September 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Strong shocks are critical in high-energy-density environments, like inertial confinement fusion, but spatial measurements of these shocks are limited.
  • This study utilized an imaging spectrometer to examine soft x-ray emissions from shock fronts in helium-neon mixtures and pure neon, finding that the shock width in the helium mixture is approximately double that in pure neon.
  • The research indicates distinct precursor layers in both gases, with higher electron temperatures in the helium mixture, and simulations reveal that thermal conduction and ion kinetics significantly influence precursor formation and shock characteristics.

Article Abstract

Strong shocks are essential components in many high-energy-density environments such as inertial confinement fusion implosions. However, the experimental measurements of the spatial structures of such shocks are sparse. In this paper, the soft x-ray emission of a shock front in a helium gas mixture (90% helium, 10% neon) and a pure neon gas was spatially resolved using an imaging spectrometer. We observe that the shock width in the helium mixture gas is about twice as large as in the pure neon gas. Moreover, they exhibit different precursor layers, where electron temperature greatly exceeds ion temperature, extending for more than ∼350µm with the helium gas mixture but less than 30µm in the pure neon. At the shock front, calculations show that the electrons are strongly collisional with mean-free path two orders of magnitude shorter than the characteristic length of the shock. However, the helium ions can reach a kinetic regime as a consequence of their mean-free path being comparable to the scale of the shock. A radiation-hydrodynamic simulation demonstrates the impact of thermal conduction on the formation of the precursors with charge state, Z, playing a major role in heat flow and the precursor formation in both the helium mixture and the pure neon gases. Particle-in-cell simulations are also performed to study the ion kinetic effects on the formation of the observed precursors. A group of fast-streaming ions is observed leading the shock only in the helium gas mixture. Both effects explain the longer precursor layer in the helium shock.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.108.035202DOI Listing

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