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Non-spherical implosion of a dense thermonuclear plasma
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 March 2009
Abstract
In contrast to the electronic heat conduction losses which for a tamped thermonuclear micro-explosion are minimized by a spherical target shape, the adiabatic temperature rise can be larger for a non-spherical implosion geometry, whereas for a given plasma volume and density the bremsstrahlung losses are independent of the particular geometry. The enhancement of the adiabatic temperature rise results from the ‘scissors effect’ in non-spherical implosions by which a cavity wedge can assume a larger geometric implosion velocity than the physical implosion velocity of the cavity wall. The net effect of the enhanced adiabatic temperature rise by the 'scissors effect' and enhanced electronic heat conduction losses for non-spherical cavity shapes results in an optimal non-spherical implosion geometry. For the special case of an imploding oblate ellipsoid the optimal eccentricity is derived from an exact analytical solution. The predicted effect leads to a reduction in required beam power density, permitting less beam focusing than is necessary for spherical targets, which is of special importance for electron- and ion-beam induced micro-explosions, and may even make possible the attainment of thermonuclear temperatures by chemical explosives.
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