Abstract

First time-integrated neutron images of a deuterium gas filled capsule were obtained using arrival time gating with the Neutron Imaging System at the National Ignition Facility. Images exist from DT (deuterium and tritium mixture) filled capsules in several energy bands but only at the Omega laser had DD (pure deuterium) filled capsules been imaged. A composite image was derived from an assembly of multiple penumbral neutron images using an iterative Maximum Likelihood reconstruction technique. This was compared with a simulated image from a radiation-hydrodynamic calculation. The observed image size, and shape agree, as do the primary DD, secondary DT neutron yields, and the burn duration. However, the observed cross-sectional profiles, although smaller in half width, extend outside the calculated, suggesting that deuterium has mixed outward into the carbon ablator. The observed X-ray image size (61 μm) is larger than the observed neutron image (51 μm). The calculations also reflect this. X-ray brightness includes carbon as well as deuterium emission. A bright spot, “meteor,” in the X-ray image is seen to move in time-gated images, but is not evident in the neutron image. It does not appear to degrade the neutron yield.

Highlights

  • First time-integrated neutron images of a deuterium gas filled capsule were obtained using arrival time gating with the Neutron Imaging System at the National Ignition Facility

  • Images exist from DT filled capsules in several energy bands but only at the Omega laser had DD filled capsules been imaged

  • The pursuit of ignition at the National Ignition Facility (NIF)1 involves the study of fusion burn from capsules with deuterium gas fills as well as those with higher yield using deuterium/tritium mixtures

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Summary

Introduction

(Received 15 March 2018; accepted 14 May 2018; published online 18 June 2018) First time-integrated neutron images of a deuterium gas filled capsule were obtained using arrival time gating with the Neutron Imaging System at the National Ignition Facility.

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