10 results match your criteria: "Pulsed Power Sciences Center[Affiliation]"

Self-consistent and detailed opacities from a non-equilibrium average-atom model.

Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci

August 2023

Pulsed Power Sciences Center, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM 87123, USA.

Modern density functional theory (DFT) is a powerful tool for accurately predicting self-consistent material properties such as equations of state, transport coefficients and opacities in high energy density plasmas, but it is generally restricted to conditions of local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) and produces only averaged electronic states instead of detailed configurations. We propose a simple modification to the bound-state occupation factor of a DFT-based average-atom model that captures essential non-LTE effects in plasmas-including autoionization and dielectronic recombination-thus extending DFT-based models to new regimes. We then expand the self-consistent electronic orbitals of the non-LTE DFT-AA model to generate multi-configuration electronic structure and detailed opacity spectra.

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A proof-of-principle CR-39 based neutron-recoil-spectrometer was built and fielded on the Z facility. Data from this experiment match indium activation yields within a factor of 2 using simplified instrument response function models. The data also demonstrate the need for neutron shielding in order to infer liner areal densities.

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The free-free opacity in plasmas is fundamental to our understanding of energy transport in stellar interiors and for inertial confinement fusion research. However, theoretical predictions in the challenging dense plasma regime are conflicting and there is a dearth of accurate experimental data to allow for direct model validation. Here we present time-resolved transmission measurements in solid-density Al heated by an XUV free-electron laser.

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A silicate dynamo in the early Earth.

Nat Commun

February 2020

Pulsed Power Sciences Center, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, 87185, USA.

The Earth's magnetic field has operated for at least 3.4 billion years, yet how the ancient field was produced is still unknown. The core in the early Earth was surrounded by a molten silicate layer, a basal magma ocean that may have survived for more than one billion years.

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Ab initio simulations and measurements of the free-free opacity in aluminum.

Phys Rev E

October 2019

Department of Physics, Clarendon Laboratory, University of Oxford, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PU, United Kingdom.

The free-free opacity in dense systems is a property that both tests our fundamental understanding of correlated many-body systems, and is needed to understand the radiative properties of high energy-density plasmas. Despite its importance, predictive calculations of the free-free opacity remain challenging even in the condensed matter phase for simple metals. Here we show how the free-free opacity can be modelled at finite-temperatures via time-dependent density functional theory, and illustrate the importance of including local field corrections, core polarization, and self-energy corrections.

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Ab intio molecular dynamics simulations show that the electrical conductivity of liquid SiO is semimetallic at the conditions of the deep molten mantle of early Earth and super-Earths, raising the possibility of silicate dynamos in these bodies. Whereas the electrical conductivity increases uniformly with increasing temperature, it depends nonmonotonically on compression. At very high pressure, the electrical conductivity decreases on compression, opposite to the behavior of many materials.

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X-ray Thomson scattering is an important experimental technique used to measure the temperature, ionization state, structure, and density of warm dense matter (WDM). The fundamental property probed in these experiments is the electronic dynamic structure factor. In most models, this is decomposed into three terms [J.

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Characteristics and scaling of tungsten-wire-array z -pinch implosion dynamics at 20 MA.

Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys

April 2005

Pulsed Power Sciences Center, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87195-1193, USA.

We present observations for 20-MA wire-array z pinches of an extended wire ablation period of 57%+/-3% of the stagnation time of the array and non-thin-shell implosion trajectories. These experiments were performed with 20-mm-diam wire arrays used for the double- z -pinch inertial confinement fusion experiments [M. E.

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Electrical conductivity for warm, dense aluminum plasmas and liquids.

Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys

August 2002

Pulsed Power Sciences Center, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87185, USA.

The electrical conductivity of warm, dense aluminum plasmas and liquids is calculated using ab initio molecular dynamics and the Kubo-Greenwood formula. The density range extends from near solid to one-hundredth of solid density, and the temperature range extends from 6000 K to 30 000 K. This density and temperature range allows direct comparison with experimental results obtained with the tamped exploding wire technique.

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