1 Introduction
Supersonic, high Mach-number flows are widely implicated in observed astrophysical phenomena. These include supernovae ejecta, accretion inflows, jets and outflows from accretion disks, and some stellar winds[Reference Hoeflich, Kumar and Wheeler1–Reference Stevens, Blondin and Pollock8]. When supersonic flows inevitably encounter resistance, they form radiating shock waves that can leave tell-tale signs in emission features across the electromagnetic spectrum[Reference McKee and Hollenbach9–Reference López-Santiago, Miceli, del Valle, Romero, Bonito, Albacete-Colombo, Pereira, de Castro and Damiani12].
On one hand, particulars of these emission features can reveal characteristic flow parameters including density, composition, velocity, temperature, or magnetic flux density and orientation, and any number of derivatives; hence, they can make observations of shock waves understandable in terms of the underlying astrophysics of the flows[Reference Osterbrock13–Reference Hartigan and Wright15]. On the other hand, the connection between observation and astrophysics leans on a theoretical framework that can be obscured by the inherent complexity of real objects and the limited perspective of real observations. Hence, laboratory astrophysics experiments that can recreate and observe these supersonic flows in a controlled setting and in real time can be useful to improve our understanding of the astrophysics underlying real observations.
In our experiments we introduce in Section 2, we use the OMEGA laser to drive highly variable, high Mach-number flows that develop into radiating bow shocks when they encounter an ablating, magnetized, quasi-linear obstacle in the form of a MIFEDS wire[Reference Gotchev, Knauer, Chang, Jang, Shoupe III, Meyerhofer and Betti16]. We use the Streaked optical pyrometer (SOP) instrument on the Rochester optical streak system (ROSS) to obtain spatially resolved streak images of the optical sources in the plasma as they develop in real time, and we present these results in Section 3. We show in Section 4 that, with support from predictive numerical simulations computed using the FLASH code[Reference Fryxell, Olson, Ricker, Timmes, Zingale, Lamb, MacNeice, Rosner, Truran and Tufo17], our observations on the SOP can be explained only when the instrument’s perspective, i.e., the optical depth of gas in its line of sight (LOS), is properly taken into account.
2 Experiment
2.1 Facilities
2.1.1 OMEGA laser
We use the OMEGA laser primarily as an energy-delivery system to drive high Mach-number flows. The OMEGA laser can deliver up to 30 kJ of 351 nm UV laser energy on mm-sized targets across 60 independently targeted and focused beams over pulses lasting 0.5–3 ns. The laser system also allows for staggering in time of laser pulses delivered through each beam, and the laser spot shape on target can also be controlled independently through the use of distributed phase plates (DPPs)[Reference Boehly, Brown, Craxton, Keck, Knauer, Kelly, Kessler, Kumpan, Loucks, Letzring, Marshall, McCrory, Morse, Seka, Soures and Verdon18]. Together, the independent spatial and temporal targeting capability of the OMEGA laser allows for complex experiments to be run. To illustrate: in a single shot, OMEGA can drive high Mach-number flows with one set of beams, and it can diagnose those plasmas by using other sets of beams to power a number of backlit instruments[Reference Katz, Ross, Sorce and Froula19, Reference Manuel, Zylstra, Rinderknecht, Casey, Rosenberg, Sinenian, Li, Frenje, Séguin and Petrasso20].
2.1.2 Streaked optical pyrometer
We use the SOP, the main instrument of the ROSS to continuously assess the time evolution of the spatially resolved source region of self-emission in the experimental plasma[Reference Miller, Boehly, Melchior, Meyerhofer, Celliers, Eggert, Hicks, Sorce, Oertel and Emmel21, Reference Jaanimagi, Boni, Butler, Ghosh, Donaldson and Keck22]. After f/3.3 imaging optics brings the self-emissions to the SOP through an adjustable slit of width 0.5–5 mm, the resulting image is sent to a Photonis P510, P820, or PJX streak tube that forms the core of SOP streak camera. At the streak tube, the image is first converted to a stream of electrons at a S-1 or S-20 photocathode at its front end. Pulse generators drive a ramping electric field inside the streak tube to focus and sweep the electron stream across a phosphor screen. The electrons are converted back into photons at the screen, and regenerated photons finally reach a 4 megapixel CCD, where the streak image is recorded. The SOP can be set to sweep any interval longer than 1 ns. Using a 10 ns sweep interval, the time resolution of the resulting streak image is ${\sim}170~\text{ps}$ with the 0.5 mm slit, and the spatial resolution is ${\lesssim}20~\unicode[STIX]{x03BC}\text{m}$ with the nominal optics.
2.2 Design
The design of our experiment has been illustrated in Figure 1 in the perspectives of both optical instruments including a gated, optical plane imager (TPDI), and the SOP. Together, the lines of sight from each instrument are orthogonal, and the structure of the assembly is unambiguous. Drawings from either perspective show the arrangement of a quasi-linear MIFEDS wire at 3-mm-minimum separation from a planar CH-polymer target of 1.2 g/c density. The target, or foil has dimensions of 3-mm diameter and $50\text{-}\unicode[STIX]{x03BC}\text{m}$ thickness. The MIFEDS wire is an arc of 11 mm over a circle of 25-mm diameter. The wire has a gross thickness of $635~\unicode[STIX]{x03BC}\text{m}$ , a copper core thickness of $400~\unicode[STIX]{x03BC}\text{m}$ , and the difference is met by kapton insulation.
In each of ten runs of the experiment, or shots, ten laser beams strike the target, and they deliver a total energy of 4.5 kJ over 1 ns to a centered, $704\text{-}\unicode[STIX]{x03BC}\text{m}$ -diameter, ${\sim}4$ th-order super-Gaussian spot. The plasma plume that develops from the rear irradiation of the target is directed toward the MIFEDS wire orthogonally from the LOS of either perspective, and we also include the aimpoint and field of view (FOV) of the instruments themselves in transparent blue overlay. The planar 2D imager looks down the arc of the wire aiming just over its edge with a 1.5-mm-diameter aperture. The SOP is a slit of 0.8-mm long and 0.5-mm wide aimed toward the arc of the MIFEDS wire face-on, and it is oriented to resolve the source as it moves down the axis of the laser plume.
In five of ten shots, we charge the MIFEDS capacitor to 18 kV, and a peak current of 30 kA is delivered down the wire on discharge. The discharge current produces a magnetic field pulse that peaks to 19 T at the wire’s surface with a flat top, and the peak field is timed to be coincident with the initiation of the laser beams. The duration of the flat top of the magnetic field pulse is $\pm$ 150 ns relative to the laser initiation, thereby it far exceeds the timescale of the plasma hydrodynamics. In these shots, the laser plume co-evolves with the magnetosphere of the MIFEDS wire, and gasdynamical effects of magnetization can become apparent when the plasma is viewed with the appropriate diagnostics.
3 Results
An SOP streak image consistent with results from eight of ten shots taken is reproduced in Figure 2. In this image, the spatially resolved vertical dimension is aligned with the laser plume axis, and it is zeroed on the target-facing edge of the MIFEDS arc. The full length of the slit – $800~\unicode[STIX]{x03BC}\text{m}$ – is represented at all times during the sweep. The temporal dimension is horizontal, and time advances from laser initiation at $t_{0}$ from left to right over 33 ns.
Sweeping across the streak image, we first see a fan-like source of emissions that originates at $t_{0}$ and radiates outward from the edge of the MIFEDS arc. We associate the source of these early emissions with plasma that has been ablated from the wire itself by a radiation precursor ahead of the laser plume. By $t_{0}+10~\text{ns}$ , we see a second source, a shock emerges from the bottom of the frame, and over the next ${\sim}10~\text{ns}$ , this bar-like feature passes into the foreground of the MIFEDS arc, and its progress is relentless before it moves out of the FOV.
Two of ten shots feature a shift in the aimpoint of the SOP slit away from the MIFEDS arc, and nearer toward the target foil. This adjustment allowed the SOP to capture the behavior of optical sources at earlier times. Combining the views taken from either aimpoint, we obtain the spatially extended view of Figure 3 that reveals the origin of the bar-like shock at the intersection, or collision of two expanding flows near $t_{0}+8~\text{ns}$ . We derive the slit-projected velocity of each feature from its slope. The outward edge of the preheat fan clocks its expansion at ${\sim}60~\text{km}/\text{s}$ , likewise the foil plume clocks in at ${\sim}200~\text{km}/\text{s}$ , and the bar-like shock travels at ${\sim}100~\text{km}/\text{s}$ .
Per design from Section 2.2 we pulsed the MIFEDS in five of ten shots, and the difference was met by unpulsed shots as controls. Images of the plasma in the pulsed shots are indistinguishable from those of control shots, hence, we infer that the magnetization of the plasma by the MIFEDS was too weak to visibly affect its apparent hydrodynamics.
4 Discussion
At a glance, it was difficult to reconcile the optical sources seen from the SOP and the expected features that connote the development of a radiating bow shock around the MIFEDS wire. In the case of a bow shock, we could expect to see the strongest emissions from the stagnated flow to hover just above the edge of the MIFEDS arc. Instead, the trajectory of the strongest source we identified as a shock in the streak images appears entirely unconcerned with the presence of what should be an impassable obstacle in the plane of the MIFEDS arc. Passage of emission sources into the foreground of the MIFEDS arc is not unexpected, but the apparent absence of any stagnating gas behind the shock was not anticipated in the design.
To satisfactorily reconstruct the experimental hydrodynamics, thereby resolving unforeseen results from our observations of the experimental bow shock, we use the FLASH Eulerian hydrodynamics code to build a realistic numerical model of the experimental radiation hydrodynamics. Our FLASH simulation affords us a view of the experimental plasma that is unconstrained by instrumental limitations in perspective. We apply post-processing, including artificial perspective to the hydrodynamical results to synthesize instrument views for direct comparison between data and simulation.
4.1 FLASH simulation
In our FLASH simulation, we draw our experimental assembly in profile view onto a 2.5D, cylindrical grid that is rotationally symmetric to the axis of the plasma plume of the laser drive foil. Our FLASH grid is sized and positioned to allow a complete representation of the evolving plasma from the perspective of the realized instrumentation. The grid extends 800 cells down the symmetric axis, and it extends 320 cells radially. Each cell has $(12.5~\unicode[STIX]{x03BC}\text{m})^{2}$ , and they sum to ( $10\hat{z}\times 4\hat{r}$ ) $\text{mm}^{2}$ . The simulation is initiated on firing a 351 nm, 1 ns square laser pulse carrying 4.5 kJ at a $750~\unicode[STIX]{x03BC}\text{m}$ -diameter, 4th-order super-Gaussian spot centered on target aligned with the rotational axis of the grid. The laser beams and energy deposition on target are implemented in the laser energy deposition package native to FLASH 4 [23]. Radiative transfer through target materials is implemented with the FLASH native multigroup diffusion (MGD) scheme and with tabulated results of IONMIX simulations[Reference Macfarlane24]. Finally, FLASH implements in its native unsplit staggered mesh (USM) solver numerically stable, fully magnetohydrodynamical calculations by adapting the constrained transport (CT) method[Reference Evans and Hawley25]. Instead, we elect to use the purely hydrodynamical (UHD) solver because our experimental dataset did not provide any evidence of magnetohydrodynamical effects against which we can test our more complex simulations.
4.2 FLASH results
We show in Figure 4 the time sequence of our FLASH simulations at $T_{e}$ covering the most important epochs in the evolution of the plasma. In addition, we have computed the depth of formation of the visible continuum, i.e., the ‘photosphere’ of the plasma seen in the SOP, by integrating the IONMIX-derived absorptivity coefficients from the outside-in. The photosphere is drawn in the $T_{e}$ plots as a black curve, and it marks where the optical depth $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}\sim 1$ . The axial temperature profile of the photosphere, then, underlies this curve, and a viewer sharing the perspective of the SOP looking in on the plasma from the outside necessarily sees the surface of the gas taking on the temperature of the photosphere as marked[Reference Gray26]. Practically, the photosphere forms where $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70C}\sim 10^{-4}~\text{g}/\text{cc}$ , and its radial position is otherwise only weakly dependent on the temperature of the fully ionized HCNO plasma.
Our time sequence in Figure 4 begins on first contact between two flows, one ablated from the MIFEDS wire by preheating, and another driven by the laser from the planar target, at $t_{0}+6~\text{ns}$ . At this time, we observe the onset of the shock that eventually becomes the bar-like emission feature we identified in Figure 2. By $t_{0}+8$ ns, this shock has become optically thick, i.e., $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}\gtrsim 1$ , or $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70C}\gtrsim 10^{-4}~\text{g}/\text{cc}$ with $T_{e}\sim 1~\text{MK}$ . On either side of the shock the continuum forms at a cooler $T_{e}\sim 0.1~\text{MK}$ . Note that, at this point the 1 MK continuum is displaced both radially and axially from true apex of the shock, and a viewer looking inwards at the true apex sees the ${\sim}0.1~\text{MK}$ continuum. Stepping through the sequence past $t_{0}+8~\text{ns}$ , the 1 MK continuum inexorably shifts outwards and upwards as it elongates. Onwards from $t_{0}+12~\text{ns}$ the 1 MK continuum source, i.e., the bar, follows an inertial trajectory across the foreground of the MIFEDS arc as first remarked in Figure 2. Note that, the nose of the bow shock is in fact stagnated by the MIFEDS arc. However, it becomes obscured by cooler gas in the perspective of the SOP at any time except around first contact near $t_{0}+6~\text{ns}$ , or when the 1 MK continuum overtakes it just before $t_{0}+12~\text{ns}$ .
Observationally, the difference in the photosphere temperature is immediately consequential. For an observer viewing the plasma in the 1.5–6.5 eV SOP band, the Rayleigh–Jeans flux is proportional to $T_{e}$ ; hence, the cooler, ${\sim}0.1~\text{MK}$ photosphere appears at least proportionately dimmer than the ${\sim}1~\text{MK}$ photosphere. With this flux–temperature relation in mind, we produced in Figure 5 a synthetic streak image to match the perspective of Figure 3. By inspection, we have entirely reproduced the plasma hydrodynamics we previously identified. Crucially, we reproduced the absence of the stagnant apex of the bow shock, and we were able to ascertain its fate.
5 Conclusion
In this article, we reproduced some of the procedures and outcomes of our experiments to recreate the interactions between a fast stellar wind and an evaporating exoplanetary atmosphere using OMEGA facilities. We demonstrated the use of the ROSS-SOP streak camera to continuously record the evolution of spatially resolved optical sources in the experimental plasma. Although the streak images were confusing at first glance, predictive numerical simulations of the experiment using the FLASH code with realistic materials and radiative transfer modeling allowed even unexpected emission features to become understood as a consequence of instrumental perspective and optical depth of the gas.
In a serendipitous twist, in being unable to fully reconstruct the experimental hydrodynamics from the limited perspective of the SOP alone, we demonstrated the necessity of designing laboratory astrophysics experiments to avoid similar limitations of real observations. In our reconciliation of synthetic and experimental images, we also demonstrated how we can overcome the limitations of real experiments using predictive numerical simulations.
Acknowledgements
This work was made possible thanks to the DOE NLUF program DE-FOA-0001568, the Data Analysis and Visualization CyberInfrastructure program OCI-0959097, Rice University, and the Laboratory for Laser Energetics.