A mid-scale (270 × 270-mm aperture) plasma-electrode Pockels cell (PEPC) has been developed for the pump laser system in FLUX (the fourth-generation laser for ultrabroadband experiments). The FLUX mid-scale PEPC is adapted from the PEPC used in the OMEGA EP beamlines (410 × 410-mm aperture), with certain dimensions scaled to reduce capacitance while maintaining key plasma characteristics. After experimental optimization of operating parameters, particularly the plasma current, <70-ns switching time with excellent (>1000:1) contrast has been demonstrated. Dependence of optical switching performance on operating conditions is explained by a plasma model.
The newly developed full-beam-in-tank (FBIT) diagnostic has the capability to characterize multiple beamlines in the target chamber. In addition to measuring multiple beams, we can obtain measurements of the step-by-step changes to achieve smoothing by spectral dispersion (SSD), the SSD kernel, and SSD synchronization. Since other existing diagnostics are all located upstream of the target chamber, this diagnostic can be used to explore a propagating beam through the final optics assembly. In this work, we investigate current discrepancies between laser diagnostics and experimental results by comparing results of on-shot direct measurements using FBIT and the equivalent-target-plane diagnostic.
B. Kruschwitz, J. Kwiatkowski, C. Dorrer, M. Barczys, A. Consentino, D. Froula, M. Guardalben, E. Hill, D. Nelson, M. Shoup, D. Turnbull, L. Waxer, D. Weiner
The OMEGA EP laser has been upgraded to provide a UV wavelength-tunable beam to support the study of wavelength detuning for the mitigation of cross-beam energy transfer in direct-drive inertial confinement fusion. The beamline delivers up to 0.5 TW in pulses up to 1-ns duration (0.1 TW up to 2.5 ns), to either the OMEGA or OMEGA EP target chambers with wavelength tunable from 350.2 to 353.4 nm. The upgrade leverages the existing optical parametric amplification (OPA) system in the short-pulse front end of OMEGA EP Beamline 1 for amplification of a new tunable, narrowband fiber front end over a broad spectral range. The tunable OPA output is spatially shaped to form a round OMEGA-like beam, which is amplified in the OMEGA EP beamline, then frequency tripled and characterized using the existing OMEGA EP long-pulse infrastructure. A new 3ω beam-transport system intercepts the tunable UV beam near the OMEGA EP target chamber and image relays it to the P9 port of the OMEGA target chamber for joint shots with the OMEGA 60-beam laser. Commissioning of the tunable UV capability has been completed, and four experimental campaigns have been supported with the tunable beam
KEYWORDS: Diagnostics, Laser systems engineering, Wavefronts, Near field optics, Near field, CCD cameras, Fusion energy, High power lasers, Laser beam diagnostics
Direct-drive fusion implosion experiments using the 60-beam OMEGA Laser System require ~1% rms uniformity on target. Measurements from laser diagnostics indicate that beam-to-beam power variation has been sufficiently reduced such that the uniformity nearly meets this requirement; however, experimental results suggest otherwise. To better understand this discrepancy, a full-beam-in-tank diagnostic has been developed to characterize the on-shot, full-energy focal spot of a single beam inside the target chamber using a small sample of the beam from the final optic assembly. In this paper, we describe the diagnostic and present the results of commissioning experiments.
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