Publication | Open Access
Short pulse, high resolution, backlighters for point projection high-energy radiography at the National Ignition Facility
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Citations
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References
2017
Year
Terrestrial Gamma-ray FlashesHigh ResolutionEngineeringRadiation DetectionPulse DurationHigh-energy X-ray BacklightersShort PulseRadiographic ImagingSynchrotron Radiation SourceInstrumentationX-ray Free-electron LaserHot SpotNuclear MedicineX-ray OpticNational Ignition FacilityRadiologyHealth Sciences
High-resolution, high-energy X-ray backlighters are very active area of research for radiography experiments at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [Miller et al., Nucl. Fusion 44, S228 (2004)], in particular those aiming at obtaining Compton-scattering produced radiographs from the cold, dense fuel surrounding the hot spot. We report on experiments to generate and characterize point-projection-geometry backlighters using short pulses from the advanced radiographic capability (ARC) [Crane et al., J. Phys. 244, 032003 (2010); Di Nicola et al., Proc. SPIE 2015, 93450I-12], at the NIF, focused on Au micro-wires. We show the first hard X-ray radiographs, at photon energies exceeding 60 keV, of static objects obtained with 30 ps-long ARC laser pulses, and the measurements of strength of the X-ray emission, the pulse duration and the source size of the Au micro-wire backlighters. For the latter, a novel technique has been developed and successfully applied.
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