Publication | Closed Access
Aurora Multikilojoule KrF Laser System Prototype for Inertial Confinement Fusion
62
Citations
32
References
1987
Year
EngineeringLaser-plasma InteractionLaser PhysicsFusion PowerLaser Plasma PhysicPlasma PhysicsHigh-power LasersLaser Plasma PhysicsControlled Nuclear FusionOptical Angular MultiplexingPlasma ConfinementKrf Laser SystemPlasma PhotonicsPhotonicsElectrical EngineeringPhysicsLaser Beam PropagationSerial AmplificationInertial Fusion EnergyAerospace EngineeringInertial Confinement FusionHigh-energy LasersFusion System Design
Aurora is the Los Alamos National Laboratory short-pulse, high-power, KrF laser system. It serves as an end-to-end technology demonstration for large-scale ultraviolet laser systems of interest for short wavelength, inertial confinement fusion (ICF) investigations. The system is a prototype for using optical angular multiplexing and serial amplification by large electron-beam-driven KrF laser amplifiers to deliver stacked, 248-nm, 5-ns duration multikilojoule laser pulses to ICF targets using an ∼1-km-long optical beam path.The entire Aurora KrF laser system is described and the design features of the following major system components are summarized: front-end lasers, amplifier train, multiplexer, optical relay train, demultiplexer, target irradiation apparatus, and alignment and controls systems.
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