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The fist-and-eye logo represents a significant piece of the work done by the Shock Physics and Recording Team - providing fast diagnostics for highly dynamic situations. Many of us are involved in shock-physics related experiments throughout the Laboratory and at other sites. We've been part of pulse-power shots at Pegasus and Ancho Canyon, in Albuquerque and Russia; gas-gun experiments at Los Alamos, Livermore, and elsewhere; and explosive-driven events at local firing points, at PHERMEX, and underground in Nevada. The major diagnostics techniques we've developed are: fast infrared pyrometry for surface temperature, fiber-optic pins for material motion, microwave interferometry for plasma blowoff, fast-pulsed X-ray sources for dynamic imaging, and gamma-ray detection schemes for nuclear energy release. We're in the midst of developing a gas-Cerenkov reaction history diagnostic for laser-driven fusion experiments and are starting up a VISAR effort to support the Physics Division thrust in proton radiography. We're doing control system hardware for Atlas and beam diagnostics for DARHT. But that's only part of it, and the breadth of our vastly different research backgrounds is reflected in our work. How about a new, more efficient protocol for digital TV? A new design concept for miniature gas turbines? Algorithms for EMP analysis? On the technical side, we can provide expertise for: fast data recording, fiber-optic design and fabrication, pulse-power system design and testing, CAD and CAM, miniature Marx banks, LIDAR, microwaves, alpha neutron and gamma detectors, imaging systems, radio-frequency diagnostics, and remote sensing technology. We also run the P-22 Bus: a complete recording station on wheels. On the analytic side, our collective background includes: image and signal analysis, fluid dynamics and shock modeling, tomography, information theory, ray tracing, plasma kinetics, electromagnetic waves, turbulence, and radiative transport.
Did we mention the new effort to measure the universal gravitational constant? Check out the write-up below.
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Physics
Division | P-21
| P-22 | P-23
| P-24 | P-25
| P-FM
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