Abstract
Radiation-hydrodynamics simulations are used to design laser-driven cylindrical implosion experiments to directly measure hydrodynamic instability growth in convergent geometry. Designs for two different size targets, varying in radial dimension by a factor of three, are presented. A set of beam pointings and powers are identified for each scale design that result in a nearly axially uniform implosion of an embedded marker layer. The implosion trajectories are shown to be scale-invariant between designs, with nearly identical scaled acceleration profiles. Linear theory and radiation-hydrodynamics simulations predict that Rayleigh-Taylor instability growth of an azimuthal perturbation, machined on the inner surface of the embedded marker, is also scale-invariant between designs.
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