Conference 11777 > Paper 11777-604
Paper 11777-604

Conceptual design for the Matter in Extreme Conditions Upgrade (MEC-U), a transformative user capability for high energy density science (Plenary Presentation)

On demand | Presented live 20 April 2021

Abstract

The Matter in Extreme Conditions (MEC) instrument at LCLS pioneered the use of the hard X-ray free electron laser (XFEL) in combination with high-power optical lasers to advance high energy density science. Commissioned in 2012 as an open-access scientific capability, this application of the powerful XFEL diagnostic has driven a rich array of high-profile scientific results, providing new insight into atomic and structural properties of dynamic plasma and high-pressure material states. Aided in part by the success of MEC and other high power laser facilities, there has been a strong call from the research community over the past 5 years for increased national investments in high power lasers combined with existing national lab infrastructure. In response to a mission need statement from the US Department of Energy, Fusion Energy Sciences, SLAC has developed a conceptual design for a project to build a new HED science facility combining high rep-rate (10Hz) petawatt laser systems and high energy (1kJ) long pulse lasers with the LCLS XFEL. Combined with flexible and high efficiency experimental systems, this facility will enable a world-unique set of scientific capabilities complementing the new emerging generation of high-power laser facilities, including the pillars of ELI and new HED end stations at European XFEL and SACLA. In this talk, I will present an overview of the facility conceptual design and place it in the context of the growing field of high-power laser science.

Presenter

Gilliss Dyer
SLAC National Accelerator Lab. (United States)
Gilliss Dyer is a Lead Scientist at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. He is Department Head and Instrument Lead of Matter in Extreme Conditions at LCLS, and Chief Scientist in the Matter in Extreme Conditions Upgrade Project. Dr. Dyer earned his BA in Physics and Mathematics from New College of Florida and his PhD in Physics at the University of Texas, Austin studying high energy density laser plasmas. As a post-doc and scientist he worked at the Texas Petawatt Laser, commissioning and then leading its experimental systems. During that time he also worked as a laser scientist at National Energetics. He joined SLAC in 2017.
Presenter/Author
Gilliss Dyer
SLAC National Accelerator Lab. (United States)