SSGF Magazine 2013
SSGF Magazine 2013
SSGF Magazine 2013
SCIENCE
The SSGF Magazine
PRESSURE
PREDICTIONS
How Sandia is refining matter models
by applying first principles
Los Alamos: Neutron
beam record-breaker
Livermore: At the edge
of the periodic table
Plus: Former fellow goes to Washington,
more juice for Z, bringing the big bang
down to size, fission and scission, and
SSGF on the road.
2013-2014
Stewardship Science
Graduate Fellowship
The Department of Energy National Nuclear Security Administration Stewardship Science
Graduate Fellowship (DOE NNSA SSGF) program provides outstanding benefits and
opportunities to students pursuing a Ph.D. in areas of interest to stewardship science,
such as properties of materials under extreme conditions and hydrodynamics, nuclear science,
or high energy density physics. The fellowship includes a 12-week research experience
at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,
Los Alamos National Laboratory
or Sandia National Laboratories.
APPLICATIONS DUE
MID JANUARY
BENEFITS
APPLY
ONLINE
IMAGES
LEFT: A metallic case
called a hohlraum holds the fuel
capsule for National Ignition Facility
experiments at Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory.
MIDDLE: At Sandia National
Laboratories, high magnetic
fields on the aluminum side of this
magnetically launched aluminum/copper
flyer drive it into diamond targets at
tens of kilometers per second,
generating enormous pressures and
shock waves in the diamond.
RIGHT: X-ray laser flashes generated in
an undulator, an arrangement of magnets
that directs high-energy electrons. Image
courtesy of Los Alamos
National Laboratory.
The DOE NNSA SSGF program is open to senior undergraduates or students in their first or second year of
graduate study. Access application materials and additional information at:
www.krellinst.org/ssgf
This is an equal opportunity program and is open to all qualified persons without regard to race, gender, religion, age, physical disability or national origin.
In missions that range from reducing the risks of nuclear terrorism or the
proliferation of nuclear weapons technology to responding to nuclear accidents like the
one at Fukushima in Japan, NNSA relies on tools and technology based on a fundamental
understanding of nuclear science. The work of fellow Matthew Buckner at Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory (page 4) on Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) advances
the state-of-the-art of a key diagnostic tool. AMS is used in several fields, including
detecting signatures of nuclear fuel reprocessing an important nonproliferation
function. Matthew used AutoCAD, along with simulation tools, to build a prototype
detector, install it and test it on a Livermore accelerator beamline.
At a more fundamental level, fellow Nicole Fields worked on calibrating a key material
during her research practicum at Los Alamos National Laboratory (page 7). Fields
examined germanium-76, an isotope researchers hope will find evidence of neutrinoless
double-beta decay. This rare interaction is key to understanding neutrinos and can
help in advancing our fundamental knowledge of the universe. She used neutron beams
from LANSCE, the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center, to simulate cosmic ray exposure
so she could calibrate the effects of this radiation for future experiments.
In related work, fellow Joshua Renner conducted his practicum at Livermore (page 7) on
the technology for time projection chambers (TPCs). These TPCs also are designed
to detect evidence of neutrinoless double-beta decay. Renner worked with physicist Adam
Bernstein on the negative ion TPC and used simulation tools to emulate ion drift behavior.
These tools provided clues to help maximize the efficiency of Livermores detector for
these rare interactions.
From fundamental exploration to prototype development, Stewardship Science fellows
are advancing the frontiers of nuclear science and helping NNSA build its future.
Christopher Deeney
Assistant Deputy Administrator
for Stockpile Stewardship
U.S. Department of Energy National
Nuclear Security Administration
S TEWA R D S H I P S C I EN C E 13/ 14 TH E S SG F MA G A ZI NE PC
STEWARDSHIP
SCIENCE
The SSGF Magazine
2013 - 2014
FEATURES
LAB INITIO
10
By Jacob Berkowitz
Sandias Luke Shulenburger and colleagues are harnessing the power of quantum Monte
Carlo methods to boost matter models accuracy. Theyre already finding that elements
under extreme temperatures and pressures behave in unexpected ways.
IN THEIR ELEMENT
15
By Karyn Hede
The newest, heaviest elements on the periodic table are difficult to produce and often
quickly disappear, making it hard to quantify their properties. Livermore scientists are
finding new ways to separate and understand these strange substances.
19
By Thomas R. ODonnell
Los Alamos National Laboratorys Trident, a powerful laser that produces fleeting pulses,
has racked up a new neutron beam record. The experiment could lead to more precise
detectors and to compact neutron sources for science and nuclear forensics.
COVER
Stewardship Science: The SSGF Magazine showcases researchers and graduate students at U.S.
Department of Energy National Nuclear Security Administration (DOE NNSA) national laboratories.
Stewardship Science is published annually by the Krell Institute for the NNSA Office of Defense
Sciences Stewardship Science Graduate Fellowship (SSGF) program, which Krell manages for NNSA
under cooperative agreement DE-FC52-08NA28752. Krell is a nonprofit organization serving the
STEWARDSHIP SCIENCE GRADUATE FELLOWSHIP
science, technology and education communities.
Copyright 2013 by the Krell Institute. All rights reserved.
For additional information, please visit www.krellinst.org/ssgf or contact the Krell Institute 1609
Golden Aspen Dr., Suite 101 | Ames, IA 50010 | Attn: SSGF | (515) 956-3696
FIRST-PRINCIPLE INVESTIGATORS
This visualization by Sandia National Laboratories
Luke Shulenburger shows a charge density map
for FeO (iron oxide) calculated with quantum
Monte Carlo methods. Iron oxide is of interest
to geophysicists, but modeling its electronic
structure is challenging. Shulenburger belongs
to a corps of young mathematicians who
include Miguel Morales of Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory, an alumnus of the National
Nuclear Security Administration Stewardship
Science Graduate Fellowship working out the
fundamental properties of this and other materials
based on first-principles physics. Read more
starting on page 10.
2013
2014
DEPARTMENTS
FRONT LINES
4 FISSION UP CLOSE
FELLOWS ON LOCATION
The latest SSGF graduates design a detector, test elements for gamma
ray exposure, put tantalum under pressure, track some particles and
measure ion-stopping power.
5 Z, SUPERCHARGED
SAMPLINGS
Fellow Evan Davis probes the slim slice
DIRECTORY
9 CONVERSATION: BRIDGING
and alumni.
IMAGE CREDITS
Cover, Luke Shulenburger, Sandia
National Laboratories (SNL);
page 1, National Nuclear Security
Administration; page 4, Walid
Younes, Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory (LLNL);
page 5, SNL; page 6, ATLAS
Experiment/CERN; page 9,
Laura Berzak Hopkins; pages
10-12, Shulenburger/SNL; pages
16-17, LLNL; pages 19-20,
Markus Roth, Technical
University of Darmstadt;
page 21, julsdesign (source:
Los Alamos National Laboratory
[LANL]); pages 22-23, LANL.
EDITOR
Bill Cannon
SR. SCIENCE EDITOR
Thomas R. ODonnell
DESIGN
julsdesign, inc.
COPY READERS
Ron Winther
Shelly Olsan
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
Monte Basgall
Jacob Berkowitz
Tony Fitzpatrick
Karyn Hede
Thomas R. ODonnell
Sarah Webb
S TEWA R D S H I P S C I EN C E 13/ 14 TH E S S G F MA G A ZI NE P3
FRONT LINES
F E L L O W S O N L O C AT I O N
Fission Up Close
DETECTOR UPGRADE
Livermores Walid
and found that voltages were incorrectly applied for the detector
for fabrication at the labs machine shop, then built the detector and
high-performance
computers, the
with that of the original detector. The new detector is more sensitive
The fellow, meanwhile, says the project was a contrast with his doctoral
work at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Under
Despite the difficulty, Younes and his colleagues have extended the
naturally and probe how that force affects the individual particles.
We dont force it, he says. We dont take a knife and cut it in two.
continued on page 6
P 4 ST E WA RD SH IP SCIENCE 1 3 / 1 4 T HE S S GF M AGAZ INE
continued on page 7
Z, Supercharged
four stages of pulse compression must reduce the span of the Marx
more powerful.
pulse. Its 33 meters in diameter and fills the high bay of Building
accelerator simulations.
The Z 300 will generate twice the current and four times the power that
inside an annular enclosed metal cavity that looks like a giant Life
Savers candy, Stygar says.
But it will need some work to upgrade LTD cavities from a 79-gigawatt
electrical pulse, the current standard, to the labs 105-gigawatt pulse
goal. To get there, technicians will replace existing switches with new,
work on LTD technology about 10 years ago. Sandia has developed the
Kinetech Inc. and Sandia. Theyll also use upgraded capacitors from
says Russia, Israel, France, England, China and other countries already
in the project.
LTD technology dates back to 1920s, when Erwin Marx described his
Stygar says the plan is to first operate an LTD cavity at 105 gigawatts.
Fitzpatrick
S TEWA R D S H I P S C I EN C E 13/ 14 TH E STony
S G F MA
G A ZI NE P5
FRONT LINES
Big Bang began our universe 13.8 billion years ago. By bashing
near-light speed, they trigger so-called Little Bangs that help reveal
quarks and gluons recombine. Thats what makes the field exciting
Bangs stupendous energy burst let quarks and gluons very briefly roam
fundamental particles.
enough to recreate those last moments when quarks and gluons were
and that one has interacted with the plasma medium, whereas the
other hasnt. They can reliably use this information to recreate details
about the immeasurable QGP itself, such as its density and temperature.
says, and his codes run on local computer clusters at Los Alamos,
when this plasma state lives and develops features we are looking
Monte Basgall
Researchers can examine the pairs of nuclei that form as the nucleus
Although scission the last part of fission is incredibly important,
examine the nucleus as it fragments. Younes and his team now use their
in part, because the breakup of a single nucleus into two doubles the
complexity: two sets of properties now, plus the nuclei are interacting,
This visualizes jet quenching in a lead-lead collision in the Large Hadron Colliders ATLAS detector at a center of
mass energy of 2.76 TeV per nucleon-nucleon pair. Green and yellow bars represent particle tracks and energy
deposition into the detector subsystems. An energetic jet is clearly visible at 1 oclock. The gray cone shows
theres a jet (a large energy deposition in a narrow cone) in this direction. Its away-side partner at 7 oclock
is completely missing, having dissipated its energy into the plasma.
ISOTOPE HOPES
double-beta decay.
PARTICLE TRACKER
Working with Steve Elliott and the Neutron Science and Technology
Groups weak interactions team, Fields examined germanium-76, an
TPCs track charged particles released when two larger particles collide
or, in some cases, when atoms of fissionable materials split. In essence,
the energetic particles scientists seek knock loose electrons from atoms of
of Energy Office of Science for the High Energy Physics program. The
group collaborates with other institutions to develop a prototype
Center to simulate cosmic ray exposure, but at higher levels. Then she
used a detector to count gamma rays and determine which and how
many radioactive isotopes resulted. With the neutron flux that hit the
foils and the measured cosmic ray neutron flux, Fields could predict
many-body problem.
discuss the role of certain neutrons in the fission process. These scission
neutrons, in the neck of that splitting peanut, sometimes are emitted
the atomic scale, this fundamental science also could help researchers
and is incredibly rich in the type of phenomena that you can study.
Sarah Webb
S TEWA R D S H I P S C I EN C E 13/ 14 TH E S S G F MA G A ZI NE P7
FRONT LINES
field to a region in which each electron can detach from its ion and
IONIC BRAKE-TAPPING
At Livermore, fellow Alex Zylstra helped set the course for aspects
HIGH-PRESSURE SITUATION
of his supervisors research and added a branch to his own path. The
Massachusetts Institute of Technology student worked with Gilbert
the way alpha particles lose energy in the implosion hot spot due to
Guruswami Ravichandran.
with colleagues. John also traveled four times to assist with experiments on
instability in tantalum.
The practicum fit well with Zylstras MIT research under Richard
Omega laser and explores the physics of fusion and general high
further along.
says, are now part of his doctoral thesis and evolved into a partnership
between the Livermore and MIT groups. The researchers carried out
a small scale, using a Caltech gas gun to target ballistic gelatin and
tin. The goal is to observe how the materials flow and see if strength
Thomas R. ODonnell
P 8 ST E WA RD SH IP SCIENCE 1 3 / 1 4 T HE S S GF M AGAZ INE
BRIDGING SCIENCE,
POLICY AND THE PUBLIC
Certainly, working in Congress really drove
that point home. I learned that there is a critical
role for scientists to play in policy. There doesnt
have to be this barrier between the policymakers
and scientists.
C O N V E R S AT I O N
National Laboratory
the public?
What are you working on now?
S TEWA R D S H I P S C I EN C E 13/ 14 TH E S S G F MA G A ZI NE P9
COVER STORY
Lab initio
BY JACOB BERKOWITZ
Luke Shulenburger
hile in high school in Lawrence, Luke Shulenburger would bike or walk up the hill
to the University of Kansas, where professors mentored the precocious teen in
math, physics, chemistry and computer science.
By his senior year, this extracurricular education had led him to the National
Junior Science and Humanities Symposium and his first paper in Physics Letters A,
co-authored with his mentors and published when he was an undergraduate at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
It also led him to a career-defining conundrum. While studying organic chemistry
and struggling to memorize reaction rules, he wondered why chemists didnt work
like physicists: mathematically, from fundamental first principles.
Why couldnt you just solve the equations behind everything? says Shulenburger,
now a staff scientist in the high energy density physics theory group at Sandia National
Laboratories in New Mexico. Ive been playing around with that ever since.
Today, Shulenburger has found his intellectual home. Hes part of a new generation
of young Stockpile Stewardship program researchers at National Nuclear Security
Administration laboratories who are driven to create models of matter based not
primarily on experimental data, but on first-principles physics equations ab initio,
literally from the beginning, models.
At the heart of this vision is Quantum Monte Carlo (QMC), a computational modeling
technique that grew from work at Los Alamos National Laboratory in the early
1950s. Sixty years later, QMC is finding its greatest expression in extreme parallel
computing applications on DOEs high-end supercomputers.
As a result, two decades since the last U.S. underground nuclear test, Shulenburger
and colleagues are taking stewardship science into a new era. They are harnessing
the combination of QMC techniques, dramatic new insights into materials at the
extreme and visions of ever more powerful computing to create a new race for
accuracy between experimentalists and theorists.
Experimental results will always be needed to ground our research, but our goal is
to provide a more complete picture, says Shulenburger, who presented his latest
QMC work at the American Physical Society meeting in March 2013.
BEYOND APPROXIMATIONS
Shulenburger wasnt the first to dream of theoretically predicting the physical and
chemical properties of matter from first principles. The pioneers of quantum theory
long shared that vision. The formulation of the Schrdinger equation describing the
quantum behavior of electrons held the promise of theoretically solving any chemical
interaction. In practice, however, the equation hits a computational Mount Everest.
Problems scale exponentially with the number of particles. Thus, even with enormous
computing power, exact solutions are obtainable only for molecules with just a
few electrons.
To vault this quantum multibody hurdle, computational scientists have developed
ways to approximate solutions to the Schrdinger equation. Each approximation
A visualization of a charge
density for solid argon,
calculated with quantum
Monte Carlo methods.
Miguel Morales
like Jupiter.
Gene/Q at Livermore.
ongoing development.
IN THEIR
ELEMENT
BY KARYN HEDE
Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
scientists are probing
properties of atoms on
the edge of the periodic
table. Their rapid
separation techniques
could have ramifications
for nuclear forensics.
For years
the Flerov Laboratory of Nuclear Reactions in Dubna, Russia, where it was first
created. Likewise, No. 116 now is livermorium, after Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory. The labs collaborated on the discoveries and still cooperate on pushing
the edge of the periodic table, seeking the outer limit of possible elements.
Perhaps no living scientist is more associated with element discovery than Livermores
Ken Moody, a radiochemist and member of Livermores super heavy element group.
Moody, who was involved in discovering elements 113 to 118, has spent years trying to
understand the central issue of how atomic nuclei balance the repulsion between
protons with the nuclear glue that binds them. Just how heavy can an element get,
he wonders, before clusters of positively charged protons prompt nuclear fission?
This lingering issue motivates nuclear chemists in the super heavy element group.
But the tools and technology required to address this fundamental question also
have found applications in nuclear forensics, actinide chemistry and other fields.
Once a new element is discovered, group
leader Dawn Shaughnessy says, the next
question is what are (its) chemical properties and
how does it relate to its neighboring elements in
the periodic table? Doing those experiments is
challenging because you are literally doing
chemistry on a single atom of something
that only lasts a short amount of time.
Their fleeting existence means we have scant
or, in some cases, no information about the
ions travel down an accelerator at
chemical properties of the heavy elements
a high velocity, about 30,000
occupying the last few blocks in period 7, the
kilometers per second, toward
last row on the periodic table. For example,
a rotating californium target.
we know that element 118 existed only by
measuring alpha particles released in its nearly immediate decay to livermorium
and then to flerovium. Its the same for nearly all the man-made elements: Scientists
only know theyve been there by counting radioactive emissions as they decay.
In this artists conception, calcium
Years ago, Moody described his work to his elementary school-aged daughter.
Her incredulous response You mean you dont actually know whether you have
anything until it goes away? encapsulates the difficulties of working with such
ephemeral species.
CHEMISTRY BY ANALOGY
Most super heavy elements can be studied only at the few places that have colliders
capable of firing ions calcium, generally at one of the actinide elements, such
as curium or californium, at speeds approaching 30,000 kilometers per second.
Experiments using these rarest of elements are both practically and financially
like lead. It should behave like a noble gas, something inert that doesnt react.
And that would be a big deal in terms of how we understand the periodic table.
The research groups goal is to understand how element 114, flerovium, behaves. To get
there, they are developing very fast chemistry using some of the lighter elements in
group 14, such as lead and tin. The researchers are studying ligands, binding agents
that can pull lead or tin out of a mixture. They also collaborate with Texas A&M
University and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) to study new materials
that will separate super heavy elements quickly and efficiently from interfering
background products. Several doctoral students have conducted their thesis research
on chemical extraction and on analyzing behavior down a specific group in the
periodic table.
If we had a real-world sample, we now believe that simply by looking at the shape
or shapes of the particles we may be able to infer the process or processes that were
used to produce those particles, says Ian Hutcheon, a physicist and leader of the
chemical & isotopic signatures group in Livermores Chemical Sciences Division.
Part of Hutcheons group specializes in the exacting work of measuring the
RARE EARTH
T
the universe. For inside each slice of meteorite debris are some of the earliest building
blocks of solid matter once-molten droplets produced by high-temperature processes
at the birth of the solar system.
Few opportunities exist to study the remnants of such phenomena here on Earth, but
a recent discovery at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory may have opened up a
new possibility.
Ian Hutcheon, a physicist who studies heterogeneous materials in the nanometer to
micrometer scales, was examining some of the glassy debris created during outdoor
nuclear testing in the 1950s and 60s. He realized that microscopic patterns in the
glassy spherules created moments after a powerful nuclear blast resemble those in
chondrules, the glassy spheres found in primitive meteorites.
It turns out that these fallout particles, even
though they are made of glass, are not
homogeneous, Hutcheon says. You find
BY THOMAS R. ODONNELL
T he
BEAM COUNTERS
RESEARCHERS USING LOS ALAMOS
NATIONAL LABORATORYS TRIDENT
LASER HAVE GENERATED POTENT
NEUTRON PULSES, OPENING NEW
AVENUES FOR SCIENCE.
to avoid high-voltage hardware and the laser bay. Do not break any interlocks.
Scientists Juan Fernndez and Markus Roth listen from a nearby office. Fernndez
leads Los Alamos experimental plasma physics group. Roth is a laser plasma
physicist from Germanys Technical University of Darmstadt. Shots are always
a little bit like a rocket launch, Roth says. But instead of sending off satellites,
Trident is firing oodles of high-energy neutrons.
Its February, and Roth is taking a break between shot setups on his second
Trident visit in under a year. In spring and summer 2012, he was a Rosen Scholar,
serving a research fellowship at LANSCE, the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center.
LANSCE includes the Lujan Center, where a kilometer-long accelerator generates
neutron beams for investigating materials, protein structures, nanomaterials and
other subjects.
Some of what the Lujan Center does in a kilometer, Trident now does in a few
millimeters, thanks to a collaboration involving Roth, Fernndez and other
researchers from Germany and from Los Alamos and Sandia National Laboratories.
The 2012 experiments produced the largest neutron beams a short-pulse laser has
ever made: An object placed a centimeter from the source would get a burst of
neutrons at a density of 4 quintillion 1018 per square centimeter per second.
Those neutrons also move fast, with energies as high as 150 megaelectron volts
(MeV, or a million electron volts). Conventional accelerator technology like that
at the Lujan Center delivers many more neutrons but over a long period. That
makes the two techniques complementary, Fernndez says.
LASER JOCKS
The voice on the intercom indicates the
power level of capacitors that soon will
discharge in Tridents high-intensity
beam. Twenty-five percent charge.
Fernndez and Roth, Merrill says, are
laser jocks: physicists who know how
to use short-pulse lasers to do all kinds
of fascinating things. Although the
two collaborators are unsure about the
nickname No self-respecting laser
scientist would call us laser jocks,
Fernndez jokes they agree lasers are
key to their research. Juan and I are
more the users, Roth says. We really
are the experimental side.
ON TARGET
Fifty percent charge.
Compared to larger laser facilities, like NIF and the University of Rochesters
Omega, research at Trident is more hands-on, Fernndez and Roth say. Los Alamos
technicians are involved, but the scientists themselves often work together to set
up targets and instruments, getting their hands dirty, Fernndez says. Graduate
students work alongside them to make as many shots as possible in a day. Roth
adds, To sum it up, we are having a party here. He laughs. Its really a great
team, but of course we are working hard.
For the neutron beam experiment, Trident targets a super-thin plastic foil. Few
big lasers can use such foils because of prepulse a weak but significant burst of
light that heats or destroys the target beforethe main pulse can hit it. Trident is
known for its high contrast, meaning the prepulse is negligible. You can shoot
targets that are very thin, Fernndez says, so you can move the whole foil at
once, as opposed to a fraction. That helps to accelerate the resulting plasma
ions to unprecedented energies.
The foils other key property is its composition: carbon and deuterium, a hydrogen
isotope that pairs a neutron with each atoms lone proton. The researchers focus
Tridents beam tightly and fire it in just trillionths of a second, hitting the foil with
200 quintillion watts of energy per square centimeter, equivalent to focusing all the
suns light into a spot the size of a pencils tip. The target is reduced to a plasma of
electrons and deuterons deuterium nuclei, comprised of one neutron and one proton.
The physics legerdemain that occurs next is vital to creating a powerful neutron
beam without a giant linear accelerator. Most plasmas are opaque to lasers; they
reflect the beam like a mirror. But under Tridents high intensity, plasma generated
from the foil becomes relativistically transparent, Roth and Fernndez say. It
starts when electromagnetic waves from the laser light push electrons into the
target. The number of electrons available steadily decreases as theyre pushed
to the back of the foil.
At the same time, the laser intensity ramps up, Roth says. The electrons have
to oscillate in that electromagnetic wave. Because the intensity is so high, the
electrons are accelerated to the speed of light, stop, accelerated to the speed
of light, stop, at every cycle of the laser pulse. That means most of the time
electrons are accelerated to near light speed.
Heres where Einstein steps in. Under relativity, electrons become heavy as they
accelerate. With laser intensity increasing, theyre no longer able to follow the
beam because to stop a very heavy electron takes a longer time than to stop a light
electron, Roth says. In quadrillionths of a second, the electrons can no longer
follow the electromagnetic waves, the foil becomes transparent and the beam
passes. Suddenly, the laser breaks through that foil and catches up with the
electrons that are already pulling on the ions on the other side. The laser couples
efficiently to all electrons in the volume, not just those on the plasma surface.
The researchers call this effect breakout afterburner the laser breaks through
the foil and transfers energy through the electrons to the deuterons, accelerating
them in a burst. The linked proton and neutron slam into a shielded beryllium
rod placed just 5 millimeters beyond the foil.
Beryllium atoms have a large cross section, meaning their neutrons have a high
probability of interacting with incoming protons and neutrons. Like a cue ball
hitting a clump of billiard balls, the deuterons send beryllium neutrons flying.
Meanwhile, some deuterons break apart, generating additional neutrons, Merrill
says. You get some added oomph. What we found is you get higher-energy
neutrons from that piece of the process.
The neutron beam could be even bigger, Fernndez says, if the foils were pure or
nearly pure frozen deuterium an idea Roth plans to try later this year.
For Merrill and his detector-developing colleagues, the tough part was finding the
neutrons amid the noise X-ray and electromagnetic radiation byproducts. They
sifted them with a time-gated system, essentially a high-speed shutter that opens
after X-rays pass but before neutrons arrive. We could find the sweet spot,
admitting the neutrons of interest while in essence, everything else was quiet.
CAPTURING NEUTRONS
here already are neutron detectors at NIF, the National Ignition Facility,
Frank Merrill says, but researchers need better ones.
In a sense, the instruments are like digital cameras. A camera with more pixels captures a finer
image. A detector with better resolution provides a more accurate picture of neutron generation
and distribution in NIF shots.
NIF implosions are little tiny things, involving capsules of about 100 microns in diameter, says
Merrill, team leader for the Advanced Imaging Group in Los Alamos National Laboratorys Physics
Division. You dont want to just see theres a neutron source 100 microns in diameter. You want to
see some of the details inside. Top resolution now is about 10 microns and researchers are
constantly investigating ways to improve it. It would be wonderful if we got to 1 micron, but thats
a fairly significant technical challenge, he adds.
With bright neutron sources like the one Merrill and other researchers developed at Los Alamos
Trident laser, detector scientists will have greater access to testing. But in some ways, Trident is too
good. NIF typically produces neutrons with energies of around 14 megaelectron volts (MeV). The
laser-driven neutrons at Los Alamos are up to 150 MeV. Its nice to have the higher energies,
Merrill says, but we were interested in the sweet spot, kind of zero to 30 MeV.
Never fear: The scientists use a high-tech gating system essentially a precise shutter to filter
out the speediest neutrons. Since they move faster, they arrive at the detectors first. Neutrons the
scientists seek come a hair later only after theshutter opens. That gated system is how we
were able to only look at the energy range we were interested in, Merrill adds.
With that and many other shots, research on the Trident neutron beam continues.
Many are part of Favallis active interrogation project, but scientists also will study
optimizing the pulse to produce neutrons with a specific range of peak energies,
Merrill says. The researchers also will address fluctuations in the number of
neutrons each pulse generates.
S TEWA R D S H I P S C I EN C E 13/ 14 TH E S S G F MA G A ZI NE P23
SAMPLINGS
Evan Davis
melting the walls, the plasma temperature must drop from hundreds
Three. Two. One. Zero. Entering pulse. Dozens of scientists and engineers
hold their breath and fix their eyes on the large computer display at the
front of the room. A warm, guttural hum fills the air, the ground
softly vibrates, and a flash of light appears on monitors throughout
the room.
with rubber bands: its possible, but its taxing and youll probably lose at
least part of the Jell-O. A dozen or so scientists work on C-Mod with the
core. At this temperature, the gas atoms are stripped of their electrons
Researchers at C-Mod and several other tokamaks over the past two
The pulse ends almost as soon as it began. The gas cools, the glow fades
from the monitors, and scientists scramble to analyze the data. Ten
minutes until next shot, the voice states, reminding the researchers
they must work quickly so theyre ready to coax every last bit of
Fusion is the energy of the sun and stars. Many scientists and engineers,
including my MIT colleagues and me, want to bottle the sun for power
we now stand poised to make a viable reactor for the first time. An
power plants will not directly produce any greenhouse gases. They
Tokamaks like C-Mod are the leading candidates for successful fusion
C-Mod is the only tokamak that operates at the same densities and
CLASS OF 2013
MATTHEW BUCKNER
School: University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill
Discipline: Nuclear Astrophysics
Advisors: Thomas Clegg and Christian Iliadis
Practicum: Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
Contact: emcuebe@gmail.com
THOMAS SALLER
School: University of Michigan
Discipline: Nuclear Engineering
Advisor: Thomas Downar
Practicum: Sandia National
Laboratories, California
Contact: tgsaller@umich.edu
MAREENA ROBINSON
School: Massachusetts Institute
of Technology
Discipline: Nuclear Science and Engineering
Advisor: Richard Lanza
Practicum: Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
Contact: mrobin@mit.edu
THIRD YEAR
HONG SIO
School: Massachusetts Institute
of Technology
Discipline: Plasma Physics
Advisor: Richard Petrasso
Contact: hsio@mit.edu
NICOLE FIELDS
School: University of Chicago
Discipline: Astroparticle Physics
Advisor: Juan Collar
Practicum: Los Alamos National Laboratory
Contact: fields@uchicago.edu
ADAM CAHILL
School: Cornell University
Discipline: Plasma Physics
Advisor: David Hammer
Practicum: Los Alamos National Laboratory
Contact: adc87@cornell.edu
KRISTEN JOHN
School: California Institute of Technology
Discipline: Aerospace Engineering
Advisor: Guruswami Ravichandran
Practicum: Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
Contact: kjohn@caltech.edu
JOHN GIBBS
School: Northwestern University
Discipline: Materials Science
Advisor: Peter Voorhees
Practicum: Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
Contact: jgibbs917@gmail.com
JOSHUA RENNER
School: University of California, Berkeley
Discipline: Nuclear/Particle Physics
Advisor: James Siegrist
Practicum: Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
Contact: josh.renner@berkeley.edu
GEOFFREY MAIN
School: Stanford University
Discipline:Computational Mathematics
Advisor: Charbel Farhat
Practicum: Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
Contact: alexmain@stanford.edu
ALEX ZYLSTRA
School: Massachusetts Institute
of Technology
Discipline: Physics
Advisor: Richard Petrasso
Practicum: Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
Contact: azylstra@psfc.mit.edu
WALTER PETTUS
School: University of Wisconsin, Madison
Discipline: Experimental Nuclear and
Particle Physics
Advisor: Karsten Heeger
Practicum: Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
Contact: pettus@wisc.edu
FOURTH YEAR
EVAN DAVIS
School: Massachusetts Institute
of Technology
Discipline: Plasma Physics and Fusion
Advisor: Miklos Porkolab
Practicum: Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
Contact: emd@mit.edu
MICHAEL HAY
School: Princeton University
Discipline: Plasma Physics
Advisor: Nathaniel Fisch
Practicum: Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
Contact: hay@princeton.edu
STEPHANIE LYONS
School:University of Notre Dame
Discipline: Nuclear Physics
Advisor: Michael Wiescher
Practicum: Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
Contact: slyons3@nd.edu
ELIZABETH MILLER
School: Northwestern University
Discipline: Materials Science and Engineering
Advisor: Scott Barnett
Practicum: Sandia National Laboratories,
New Mexico and California
Contact: elizabethmiller2015@
u.northwestern.edu
DIRECTORY
JENNIFER SHUSTERMAN
School: University of California, Berkeley
Discipline: Nuclear Chemistry
Advisor: Heino Nitsche
Practicum: Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
Contact: Jennifer.Shusterman@berkeley.edu
CHRISTOPHER YOUNG
School: Stanford University
Discipline: Plasma Physics/Thermosciences
Advisor: Mark Cappelli
Practicum: Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
Contact: cvyoung@stanford.edu
SECOND YEAR
SAMANTHA LAWRENCE
School: Purdue University
Discipline: Materials Science and Engineering
Advisor: David Bahr
Practicum: Sandia National
Laboratories, California
Contact: slawrence.wsu@gmail.com
J. SCOTT MORELAND
School: Duke University
Discipline: Heavy-ion Nuclear Theory
Advisor: Steffen Bass
Contact: morelandjs@gmail.com
SSGF PROGRAM
Coordinator: Lucille Kilmer Contact: kilmer@krellinst.org
SABRINA STRAUSS
School: University of Notre Dame
Discipline: Physics
Advisor: Ani Aprahamian
Contact: systrauss@att.net
FIRST YEAR
BENJAMIN GALLOWAY
School: University of Colorado-Boulder
Discipline: Atomic, Molecular,
Optical Physics
Advisor: Margaret Murnane
Contact: Benjamin.r.galloway@colorado.edu
FABIO IUNES SANCHES
School: University of California, Berkeley
Discipline: Physics
Advisor: Undetermined
Contact: Fabioh.sanches@yahoo.com
IO KLEISER
School: California Institute of Technology
Discipline: Astrophysics
Advisor: Christian Ott
Contact: ikleiser@caltech.edu
JUAN MANFREDI
School: Michigan State University
Discipline: Nuclear Physics
Advisor: Betty Tsang
Contact: manfredi@frib.msu.edu
SARAH PALAICH
School: University of California, Los Angeles
Discipline: Geochemistry
Advisor: Abby Kavner
Contact: palaich@ucla.edu
FORREST DOSS
School: University of Michigan
Discipline: Experimental Astrophysics
Fellowship Years: 2006-2010
Current Status: Staff Scientist, Los Alamos
National Laboratory
PAUL ELLISON
School: University of California, Berkeley
Discipline: Physical Chemistry
Fellowship Years: 2007-2011
Current Status: Postdoctoral Fellow,
University of Wisconsin-Madison
ANNA ERICKSON (NIKIFOROVA)
School: Massachusetts Institute
of Technology
Discipline: Nuclear Engineering
Fellowship Years: 2008-2011
Current Status: Assistant Professor,
Georgia Institute of Technology
MATTHEW GOMEZ
School: University of Michigan
Discipline: Plasma Physics and Fusion
Fellowship Years: 2007-2011
Current Status: Staff Scientist, Sandia
National Laboratories, New Mexico
RICHARD KRAUS
School: Harvard University
Discipline: Planetary Science
Fellowship Years: 2008-2012
Current status: Finishing degree,
Harvard University
JORDAN MCDONNELL
School: University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Discipline: Theoretical Physics
Fellowship Years: 2008-2012
Current status: Postdoctoral Fellow,
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
MIGUEL MORALES
School: University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
Discipline: Theoretical Condensed
Matter Physics
Fellowship Years: 2006-2009
Current Status: Staff Scientist, Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory
ALUMNI
PATRICK OMALLEY
School: Rutgers University
Discipline: Experimental Nuclear Physics
Fellowship Years: 2008-2012
Current Status: Postdoctoral Fellow,
Colorado School of Mines
LUKE ROBERTS
School: University of California, Santa Cruz
Discipline: High Energy Astrophysics
Fellowship Years: 2007-2011
Current Status: Finishing degree,
University of California, Santa Cruz
KRYSTLE CATALLI
School: Massachusetts Institute
of Technology
Discipline: Geophysics
Fellowship Years: 2007-2011
Current Status: Failure Analysis
Engineer, Apple
ANGELO SIGNORACCI
School: Michigan State University
Discipline: Nuclear Physics
Fellowship Years: 2007-2011
Current Status: Postdoctoral Fellow,
Commissariat lnergie atomique
(CEA), France
PAUL DAVIS
School: University of California, Berkeley
Discipline: Applied Physics
Fellowship Years: 2008-2012
Advisor: Roger Falcone
Practicum: Sandia National Laboratories,
New Mexico
Contact: pfdavis@berkeley.edu
DYLAN SPAULDING
School: University of California, Berkeley
Discipline: Geophysics/Planetary Science
Fellowship Years: 2006-2010
Current Status: Postdoctoral Fellow,
Harvard University
TAW INSPIRING