Matter and Radiation at Extremes (May 2018)

Macroscopic laser–plasma interaction under strong non-local transport conditions for coupled matter and radiation

  • J. Nikl,
  • M. Holec,
  • M. Zeman,
  • M. Kuchařík,
  • J. Limpouch,
  • S. Weber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mre.2018.03.001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 3
pp. 110 – 126

Abstract

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Reliable simulations of laser–target interaction on the macroscopic scale are burdened by the fact that the energy transport is very often non-local. This means that the mean-free-path of the transported species is larger than the local gradient scale lengths and transport can be no longer considered diffusive. Kinetic simulations are not a feasible option due to tremendous computational demands, limited validity of the collisional operators and inaccurate treatment of thermal radiation. This is the point where hydrodynamic codes with non-local radiation and electron heat transport based on first principles emerge. The simulation code PETE (Plasma Euler and Transport Equations) combines both of them with a laser absorption method based on the Helmholtz equation and a radiation diffusion scheme presented in this article. In the case of modelling ablation processes it can be observed that both, thermal and radiative, transport processes are strongly non-local for laser intensities of 1013 W/cm2 and above. In this paper simulations for various laser intensities and different ablator materials are presented, where the non-local and diffusive treatments of radiation transport are compared. Significant discrepancies are observed, supporting importance of non-local transport for inertial confinement fusion related studies as well as for pre-pulse generated plasma in ultra-high intensity laser–target interaction.