"To preclude damage from NIF's powerful laser beam, thin-fused silica optics located in the final optics assembly must have fabricated surfaces that are essentially flawless," said Sol F. Laufer, Zygo's vice president of optics. "This requires the development of new and improved fabrication and testing techniques, as well as equipment to accomplish thin fused silica optics fabrication cost-effectively."
NIF, currently under construction at LLNL under funding from the Department of Energy (DOE) and the National Nuclear Security Agency, is designed to produce 1.8-million joules of laser energy and a design fusion yield of 20-million joules. Experiments performed on NIF will be essential to DOE's Stockpile Stewardship Program to ensure the safety and reliability of the nation's nuclear stockpile. NIF will also have basic science applications in such areas as astrophysics, hydrodynamics and material properties, and is expected to provide insight into the viability of fusion as a future economic energy source.
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