A novel flat-response x-ray detector has been developed for the measurement of radiation flux from a hohlraum. In order to obtain a flat response in the photon energy range of 0.1-4 keV, it is found that both the cathode and the filter of the detector can be made of gold. A further improvement on the compound filter can then largely relax the requirement of the calibration x-ray beam. The calibration of the detector, which is carried out on Beijing Synchrotron Radiation Facility at Institute of High Energy Physics, shows that the detector has a desired flat response in the photon energy range of 0.1-4 keV, with a response flatness smaller than 13%. The detector has been successfully applied in the hohlraum experiment on Shenguang-III prototype laser facility. The radiation temperatures inferred from the detector agree well with those from the diagnostic instrument Dante installed at the same azimuth angle from the hohlraum axis, demonstrating the feasibility of the detector.
We study a four-dimensional system modified from a three-dimensional chaotic circuit by adding a memristor, which is a new fundamental electronic element with promising applications. Although the system has a line of infinitely many equilibria, our studies show that when the strength of the memristor increases, it can exhibit rich interesting dynamics, such as hyperchaos, long period-1 orbits, transient hyperchaos, as well as non-attractive behaviors frequently interrupting hyperchaos. To verify the existence of hyperchaos and reveal its mechanism, a horseshoe with two-directional expansion is studied rigorously in detail by the virtue of the topological horseshoe theory and the computer-assisted approach of a Poincaré map. At last, the system is implemented with an electronic circuit for experimental verification.
We propose a new computational approach for embedded boundary simulations of hyperbolic systems. Applications are shown for the linear wave equations and for the nonlinear shallow water system. The proposed approach belongs to the class of surrogate/approximate boundary algorithms and is based on the idea of shifting the location where boundary conditions are applied from the true to a surrogate boundary. Accordingly, boundary conditions, enforced weakly, are appropriately modified to preserve optimal error convergence rates. This framework is applied here in the setting of a stabilized finite element method, even though other spatial discretization techniques could have been employed. Accuracy, stability and robustness of the proposed method are tested by means of an extensive set of computational experiments for the acoustic wave propagation equations and shallow water equations. Comparisons with standard weak boundary conditions imposed on grids that conform to the geometry of the computational domain boundaries are also presented. § Team CARDAMOM, INRIA Bordeaux Sud-Ouest, 200 av. de la vieille tour33405 Talence Cedex, France Shifted boundary method pour systèmes hyperboliques:ondes linéaires et équations shallow waterRésumé : On propose une nouvelle approche pour des simulations avec bords immergés pour des systèmes hyperboliques et en particulier les équations shallow water. L'approche proposée consiste en modifier les conditions au bords avec un développement limité permettant d'assurer l'ordre deux avec des embedded boundaries. L'approche est implementé est validée ici dans le cadre d'une méthode de type stabilized finite element sur un très grand nombre de cas tests représentatifs d'applications de propagation de vagues et inondation.
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