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Innovative Technology Enables a New Architecture for the World’s Largest Laser

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To achieve temperatures and pressures similar to those at the center of the sun, the National Ignition Facility will employ a new optical switch technology -- the plasma-electrode Pockels cell.

Camille Bibeau, Mark A. Rhodes and L. Jeffrey Atherton, Lawrence Livermore National

The world’s largest laser, the National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, Calif., is 85 percent complete (Figure 1). When operational, its 192 ultraviolet beams will converge on a target filled with frozen hydrogen, enabling scientists to observe the behavior of materials at temperatures and pressures never before achieved and to study the physics of inertial-confinement fusion. Figure 1. This schematic of the 192-beam National Ignition Facility shows (clockwise from bottom left) a plasma-electrode Pockels cell, the interior of the laser...Read full article

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    Published: June 2006
    energyFeaturesfrozen hydrogenNational Ignition Facilityultrafast lasersLasers

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