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Advances in U.S. Heavy Ion Fusion Science (open access)

Advances in U.S. Heavy Ion Fusion Science

During the past two years, the US heavy ion fusion science program has made significant experimental and theoretical progress in simultaneous transverse and longitudinal beam compression, ion-beam-driven warm dense matter targets, high-brightness beam transport, advanced theory and numerical simulations, and heavy ion target physics for fusion. First experiments combining radial and longitudinal compression {pi} of intense ion beams propagating through background plasma resulted in on-axis beam densities increased by 700X at the focal plane. With further improvements planned in 2008, these results enable initial ion beam target experiments in warm dense matter to begin next year. They are assessing how these new techniques apply to higher-gain direct-drive targets for inertial fusion energy.
Date: September 3, 2007
Creator: Barnard, J. J.; Logan, B. G.; Bieniosek, F. M.; Cohen, R. H.; Coleman, J. E.; Davidson, R. C. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library