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Tungsten wire-array Z-pinch experiments at 200 TW and 2 MJ
582
Citations
9
References
1998
Year
X-ray SpectroscopyEngineeringX-ray PowersX-ray ImagingRadiation GenerationSuperconductivityTungsten WiresInstrumentationRadiation ImagingHealth SciencesElectrical EngineeringPhysicsX-ray EnergyWire-array Z-pinch ExperimentsInstrument ScienceApplied PhysicsInstrument DevelopmentElectronic InstrumentationX-ray Optic
Here Z, a 60 TW/5 MJ electrical accelerator located at Sandia National Laboratories, has been used to implode tungsten wire-array Z pinches. These arrays consisted of large numbers of tungsten wires (120–300) with wire diameters of 7.5 to 15 μm placed in a symmetric cylindrical array. The experiments used array diameters ranging from 1.75 to 4 cm and lengths from 1 to 2 cm. A 2 cm long, 4 cm diam tungsten array consisting of 240, 7.5 μm diam wires (4.1 mg mass) achieved an x-ray power of ∼200 TW and an x-ray energy of nearly 2 MJ. Spectral data suggest an optically thick, Planckian-like radiator below 1000 eV. One surprising experimental result was the observation that the total radiated x-ray energies and x-ray powers were nearly independent of pinch length. These data are compared with two-dimensional radiation magnetohydrodynamic code calculations.
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