skip to main content
OSTI.GOV title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: Radiation in Particle Simulations

Conference ·

Hot dense radiative (HDR) plasmas common to Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) and stellar interiors have high temperature (a few hundred eV to tens of keV), high density (tens to hundreds of g/cc) and high pressure (hundreds of megabars to thousands of gigabars). Typically, such plasmas undergo collisional, radiative, atomic and possibly thermonuclear processes. In order to describe HDR plasmas, computational physicists in ICF and astrophysics use atomic-scale microphysical models implemented in various simulation codes. Experimental validation of the models used to describe HDR plasmas are difficult to perform. Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) of the many-body interactions of plasmas is a promising approach to model validation but, previous work either relies on the collisionless approximation or ignores radiation. We present four methods that attempt a new numerical simulation technique to address a currently unsolved problem: the extension of molecular dynamics to collisional plasmas including emission and absorption of radiation. The first method applies the Lienard-Weichert solution of Maxwell's equations for a classical particle whose motion is assumed to be known. The second method expands the electromagnetic field in normal modes (planewaves in a box with periodic boundary-conditions) and solves the equation for wave amplitudes coupled to the particle motion. The third method is a hybrid molecular dynamics/Monte Carlo (MD/MC) method which calculates radiation emitted or absorbed by electron-ion pairs during close collisions. The fourth method is a generalization of the third method to include small clusters of particles emitting radiation during close encounters: one electron simultaneously hitting two ions, two electrons simultaneously hitting one ion, etc. This approach is inspired by the virial expansion method of equilibrium statistical mechanics. Using a combination of these methods we believe it is possible to do atomic-scale particle simulations of fusion ignition plasmas including the important effects of radiation emission and absorption.

Research Organization:
Lawrence Livermore National Lab. (LLNL), Livermore, CA (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
DOE Contract Number:
W-7405-ENG-48
OSTI ID:
1016311
Report Number(s):
LLNL-CONF-462933; TRN: US1103042
Resource Relation:
Journal Volume: 6; Journal Issue: 1; Conference: Presented at: Radiative Properties of Hot Dense Matter, Santa Barbara, CA, United States, Oct 11 - Oct 15, 2009
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

References (12)

Monte Carlo Study of a Oneā€Component Plasma. I journal September 1966
XCIII. On the theory of X-ray absorption and of the continuous X-ray spectrum journal November 1923
Bremsstrahlung in high-density plasmas journal November 1985
Beyond Finite-Size Scaling in Solidification Simulations journal June 2006
Die Berechnung optischer und elektrostatischer Gitterpotentiale journal January 1921
Simulation of Electrostatic Systems in Periodic Boundary Conditions. I. Lattice Sums and Dielectric Constants
  • de Leeuw, S. W.; Perram, J. W.; Smith, E. R.
  • Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, Vol. 373, Issue 1752 https://doi.org/10.1098/rspa.1980.0135
journal October 1980
Molecular dynamic simulations with radiation journal May 2009
Three-dimensional HYDRA simulations of National Ignition Facility targets journal May 2001
Theorie des Quanten-Plasmas journal January 1963
Method for Determining the Thermodynamic Properties of the Quantum Electron Gas journal May 1967
Analysis of semi-classical potentials for molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulations of warm dense matter journal October 2007
First-principles multiphase equation of state of carbon under extreme conditions journal July 2008

Similar Records

Radiation in Particle Simulations
Conference · Mon Jun 15 00:00:00 EDT 2009 · OSTI ID:1016311

Radiation in molecular dynamic simulations
Journal Article · Mon Oct 13 00:00:00 EDT 2008 · Journal of Physics A, vol. 42, no. 21, May 29, 2009, pp. 214030 · OSTI ID:1016311

Pulsed-power-driven high energy density physics and inertial confinement fusion research
Journal Article · Sun May 15 00:00:00 EDT 2005 · Physics of Plasmas · OSTI ID:1016311