International audienceA model is developed that permits the calculation of the radiation emitted by complex or highly charged ions in a plasma. The model is based on the usual separation of the plasma-emitter interaction into the homogeneous broadening effects of the fast electrons and the inhomogeneous broadening arising from slow ions. For plasma conditions where the ion motion can be neglected, the spectrum is the usual static line shape. To account for ion dynamics, the frequency-fluctuation model is introduced by decomposing the line shape of each radiative transition into a sum of radiative channels that are associated with the smallest observable inhomogeneities that form the static profile. The fluctuations of the ion microfield, the ion dynamics effect, is modeled by an exchange process between the static radiative channels. This results in both a smoothing and an overall coalescence of the radiative channels and depends strongly on an averaged characteristic fluctuation rate associated with the dynamics of the interaction of the local plasma microfield with the ion. This rate is formally related to the double-time field-field correlation function behavior. This stochastic model of the observed frequency fluctuations permits fast and accurate calculations of the emitted spectral profiles, including ion dynamics emitted by complex ions in a wide range of plasma conditions
Powerful laser-plasma processes are explored to generate discharge currents of a few 100 kA in coil targets, yielding magnetostatic fields (B-fields) in excess of 0.5 kT. The quasi-static currents are provided from hot electron ejection from the laser-irradiated surface. According to our model, describing qualitatively the evolution of the discharge current, the major control parameter is the laser irradiance I las λ 2 las . The space-time evolution of the B-fields is experimentally characterized by high-frequency bandwidth B-dot probes and by proton-deflectometry measurements. The magnetic pulses, of ns-scale, are long enough to magnetize secondary targets through resistive diffusion. We applied it in experiments of laser-generated relativistic electron transport into solid dielectric targets, yielding an unprecedented 5-fold enhancement of the energy-density flux at 60 µm depth, compared to unmagnetized transport conditions. These studies pave the ground for magnetized high-energy density physics investigations, related to laser-generated secondary sources of radiation and/or high-energy particles and their transport, to high-gain fusion energy schemes and to laboratory astrophysics.
A very fast method to account for charged particle dynamics effects in calculations of spectral line shape emitted by plasmas is presented. This method is based on a formulation of the frequency fluctuation model (FFM), which provides an expression of the dynamic line shape as a functional of the static distribution of frequencies. Thus, the main numerical work rests on the calculation of the quasistatic Stark profile. This method for taking into account ion dynamics allows a very fast and accurate calculation of Stark broadening of atomic hydrogen high- n series emission lines. It is not limited to hydrogen spectra. Results on helium- beta and Lyman- alpha lines emitted by argon in microballoon implosion experiment conditions compared with experimental data and simulation results are also presented. The present approach reduces the computer time by more than 2 orders of magnitude as compared with the original FFM with an improvement of the calculation precision, and it opens broad possibilities for its application in spectral line-shape codes.
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