Abstract
A fiber-coupled Dispersion Interferometer (DI) is being developed to measure the electron density of plasmas formed in power flow regions, such as magnetically insulated transmission lines, on Sandia National Laboratories (SNL's) Z machine [D. B. Sinars etal., Phys. Plasmas 27, 070501 (2020)]. The diagnostic operates using a fiber-coupled 1550nm CW laser with frequency-doubling to 775nm. The DI is expected to be capable of line-average density measurements between ∼1013 and 1019 cm-2. Initial testing has been performed on a well-characterized RF lab plasma [A. G. Lynn etal., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 80, 103501 (2009)] at the University of New Mexico to quantify the density resolution lower limits of the DI. Initial testing of the DI has demonstrated line-average electron density measurements within 9% of results acquired via a 94GHzmm wave interferometer for line densities of ∼1 × 1014cm-2, despite significant differences in probe beam geometries. The instrument will next be utilized for measurements on a ∼1 MA-scale pulsed power driver {MYKONOS [N. Bennett etal., Phys. Rev. Accel. Beams 22, 120401 (2019)] at SNL} before finally being deployed on SNL's Z machine. The close electrode spacing (mm scale) on Z requires probe beam sizes of ∼1mm, which can only be obtained with visible or near infrared optical systems, as opposed to longer wavelength mm wave systems that would normally be chosen for this range of density.
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