X-ray imaging and electron temperature evolution in laser-driven magnetic reconnection experiments at the national ignition facility

Vicente Valenzuela-Villaseca, Jacob M. Molina, Derek B. Schaeffer, Sophia Malko, Jesse Griff-McMahon, Kirill Lezhnin, Michael J. Rosenberg, S. X. Hu, Dan Kalantar, Clement Trosseille, Hye Sook Park, Bruce A. Remington, Gennady Fiksel, Dmitri Uzdensky, Amitava Bhattacharjee, William Fox

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Abstract

We present results from x-ray imaging of high-aspect-ratio magnetic reconnection experiments driven at the National Ignition Facility. Two parallel, self-magnetized, elongated laser-driven plumes are produced by tiling 40 laser beams. A magnetic reconnection layer is formed by the collision of the plumes. A gated x-ray framing pinhole camera with micro-channel plate detector produces multiple images through various filters of the formation and evolution of both the plumes and current sheet. As the diagnostic integrates plasma self-emission along the line of sight, two-dimensional electron temperature maps ⟨ T e ⟩ Y are constructed by taking the ratio of intensity of these images obtained with different filters. The plumes have a characteristic temperature ⟨ T e ⟩ Y = 240 ± 20 eV at 2 ns after the initial laser irradiation and exhibit a slow cooling up to 4 ns. The reconnection layer forms at 3 ns with a temperature ⟨ T e ⟩ Y = 280 ± 50 eV as the result of the collision of the plumes. The error bars of the plumes and current sheet temperatures separate at 4 ns, showing the heating of the current sheet from colder inflows. Using a semi-analytical model, we survey various heating mechanisms in the current sheet. We find that reconnection energy conversion would dominate at low density ( n e ≲ 7 × 10 18 cm−3) and electron-ion collisional drag at high-density ( ≳ 10 19 cm−3).

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number082106
JournalPhysics of Plasmas
Volume31
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 1 2024

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Condensed Matter Physics

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