Abstract

A radiographic diagnostic has been developed to quantify the plume of erosion products after the interaction between a target and a relativistic electron beam. The diagnostic is based on a point Z-pinch (PZ-pinch) with a metallic plasma jet. It creates an X-ray source with a typical size of 10 μm, a photon energy of up to 3 keV and a flash duration of 3 ns. The X-ray visualization system is based on a thin scintillator and a CCD camera. The spatial resolution of the diagnostic was evaluated experimentally. The spatial frequency limit was found to be about 1.5 line pairs per millimeter. The diagnostic was tested in an experiment performed using an LIA-5 linear induction accelerator. An electron beam with a current of 400 A, an energy of 3.5 MeV and a pulse duration of 80 ns was focused on a plane tantalum target 1 mm in thickness. The FWHM of the focal spot was ∼ 2 mm. Radiographs of the plume were taken with different delays after different accelerator pulses. According to our data, the plume most commonly propagates toward the beam. After 70 μs its length was about 70 mm, i.e. the plume expansion rate was about 1 km/s. The area density of the semi-transparent regions of the plume was estimated as lying in the range 3 · 10-16–2 · 1017 cm-2.

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