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Developing a Radiative Shock Experiment Relevant to Astrophysics.

Shigemori, Ditmire, Remington

    The Astrophysical Journal
    |April 19, 2000
    PubMed
    Summary
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    Experiments on the Falcon laser simulated astrophysical shocks using laser-irradiated gas jets. Results show blast wave velocities lower than predicted, with ionization precursors indicating radiative cooling and preheat effects.

    Area of Science:

    • Plasma physics
    • Astrophysical shock simulation
    • High-energy-density physics

    Background:

    • Astrophysical shocks are crucial phenomena in space.
    • Simulating these shocks in laboratory settings is challenging.
    • Previous simulations often lack radiative effects.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To simulate radiative astrophysical shocks using laboratory experiments.
    • To investigate blast wave dynamics in laser-produced plasmas.
    • To compare experimental results with theoretical models.

    Main Methods:

    • Utilizing the Falcon laser system for plasma generation.
    • Creating cylindrically diverging blast waves in Xenon gas jets.
    • Employing Michelson interferometry for blast wave trajectory measurement.

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    Main Results:

    • Blast wave velocities were measured to be slightly lower than Sedov-Taylor predictions.
    • An ionization precursor was observed ahead of the shock front.
    • Experimental data aligns with one-dimensional radiation hydrodynamics simulations.

    Conclusions:

    • The experiments successfully simulated key aspects of radiative astrophysical shocks.
    • Observed deviations suggest significant energy loss via radiative cooling.
    • Preheat effects ahead of the shock front were also inferred, impacting compression.