Variation in the Amplitude of Perturbations on the Inner Surface of an Imploding Shell during the Coasting Phase.

Abstract

In some inertial confinement fusion target designs a spherical shell collapses on a void or compresses a small amount of gaseous material. There can be a period during which both the outside (driver) pressure and the inside pressure have a negligible effect on the implosion dynamics, and the motion is essentially ballistic. The changes in the aspect ratio occur mainly because of geometrical convergence. For reasonable parameters the inner surface does not begin to decelerate until shortly before convergence is complete. An approximate description of this casting phase is developed and to study the evolution of perturbations on the inner and outer surfaces of the shell in the limit where the fluid is incompressible. The two surfaces are strongly coupled as long as the shell remains thin. When the shell becomes thick compared to the inner radius, the inner and outer surface perturbations decouple. Under these conditions the surface wave action is a good adiabatic invariant, which can be used to estimate the change in the amplitude of a perturbation as a function of the shell inner radius R1. Detailed analysis confirms the adiabatic invariance argument and extends the results. We speculate that the adiabatic invariant may also be good in the case of compressible fluids.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Nov 10, 1986
Accession Number
ADA175336

Entities

People

  • David L. Book
  • Stephen E. Bodner

Organizations

  • United States Naval Research Laboratory

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Acoustic Propagation
  • Amplitude
  • Aspect Ratio
  • Coefficients
  • Convergence
  • Differential Equations
  • Dispersion Relations
  • Dynamics
  • Equations
  • Frequency
  • Implosions
  • Instability
  • Materials
  • Physics
  • Rayleigh Taylor Instability
  • Surface Waves
  • Waves

Readers

  • Combustion Dynamics and Shock Wave Physics.
  • Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD)
  • Plasma Physics / Magnetohydrodynamics