物理
惯性约束聚变
惯性参考系
融合
航空航天工程
系统工程
核物理学
理论物理学
等离子体
经典力学
语言学
工程类
哲学
作者
O. A. Hurricane,P. K. Patel,R. Betti,D. H. Froula,S. P. Regan,S. A. Slutz,M. R. Gómez,M. A. Sweeney
标识
DOI:10.1103/revmodphys.95.025005
摘要
Inertial confinement fusion (ICF) has existed as a field of study since the 1970s, but the field was born out of the Cold War. In the decades since the 1960s, pioneering research developing the principles and technologies of ICF culminated in the creation of three major Department of Energy facilities that still exist today, the National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Lab, the OMEGA laser at the Laboratory for Laser Energetics, and the Z pulsed power facility at Sandia National Laboratories. While the technology of ICF facilities themselves is fascinating, this review concentrates upon the physics principles of the targets fielded on U.S. ICF facilities and upon results from the last decade of research. Furthermore, while there have been periods of frustration on the road to ICF ignition, recent research has demonstrated great leaps in understanding what aspects of the implosions need more control. Tangible progress in ICF is evident as burning plasmas and ignited plasmas have recently been generated, repeatedly, on the NIF stemming from decades of science and engineering understanding generated from work on the above three facilities and international community.
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