Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1830619 | Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2007 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
To create high-energy density matter and fusion conditions, high-power drivers, such as lasers, ion beams, and X-ray drivers, may be employed to heat targets with short pulses compared to hydro-motion. Both high-energy density physics and ion-driven inertial fusion require the simultaneous transverse and longitudinal compression of an ion beam to achieve high intensities. We have previously studied the effects of plasma neutralization for transverse beam compression. The scaled experiment, the Neutralized Transport Experiment (NTX), demonstrated that an initially un-neutralized beam can be compressed transversely to â¼1Â mm radius when charge neutralization by background plasma electrons is provided. Here, we report longitudinal compression of a velocity-tailored, intense, neutralized 25Â mA K+ beam at 300Â keV. The compression takes place in a 1-2Â m drift section filled with plasma to provide space-charge neutralization. An induction cell produces a head-to-tail velocity ramp that longitudinally compresses the neutralized beam, enhances the beam peak current by a factor of 50 and produces a pulse duration of about 3Â ns. The physics of longitudinal compression, experimental procedure, and the results of the compression experiments are presented.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Instrumentation
Authors
P.K. Roy, S.S. Yu, W.L. Waldron, A. Anders, D. Baca, J.J. Barnard, F.M. Bieniosek, J. Coleman, R.C. Davidson, P.C. Efthimion, S. Eylon, A. Friedman, E.P. Gilson, W.G. Greenway, E. Henestroza, I. Kaganovich, M. Leitner, B.G. Logan, D.R. Welch,