Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5428017 | Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer | 2015 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Supersonic and diffusive radiation flow is an important test problem for the radiative transfer models used in radiation-hydrodynamics computer codes owing to solutions being accessible via analytic and numeric methods. We present experimental results with which we compare these solutions by studying supersonic and diffusive flow in the laboratory. We present results of higher-accuracy experiments than previously possible studying radiation flow through up to 7 high-temperature mean free paths of low-density, chlorine-doped polystyrene foam and silicon dioxide aerogel contained by an Au tube. Measurements of the heat front position and absolute measurements of the x-ray emission arrival at the end of the tube are used to test numerical and analytical models. We find excellent absolute agreement with simulations provided that the opacity and the equation of state are adjusted within expected uncertainties; analytical models provide a good phenomenological match to measurements but are not in quantitative agreement due to their limited scope.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Spectroscopy
Authors
Alastair S. Moore, Thomas M. Guymer, John Morton, Benjamin Williams, John L. Kline, Nicholas Bazin, Christopher Bentley, Shelly Allan, Katie Brent, Andrew J. Comley, Kirk Flippo, Joseph Cowan, J. Martin Taccetti, Katie Mussack-Tamashiro,