L
Lin Yin
Researcher at Los Alamos National Laboratory
Publications - 179
Citations - 7356
Lin Yin is an academic researcher from Los Alamos National Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Laser & Ion. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 163 publications receiving 6580 citations. Previous affiliations of Lin Yin include Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory & Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Role of electron physics in the development of turbulent magnetic reconnection in collisionless plasmas
William Daughton,Vadim Roytershteyn,Homa Karimabadi,Lin Yin,Brian J. Albright,B. Bergen,Kevin J. Bowers +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, Petaflop-scale simulations of the evolution of turbulent magnetic reconnection in a three-dimensional plasma indicate that it proceeds in a way that is dramatically different from classical theory.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ultrahigh performance three-dimensional electromagnetic relativistic kinetic plasma simulationa)
TL;DR: VPIC has enabled previously intractable simulations in numerous areas of plasma physics, including magnetic reconnection and laser plasma interactions; next generation supercomputers like Roadrunner will enable further advances.
Journal ArticleDOI
Monoenergetic and GeV ion acceleration from the laser breakout afterburner using ultrathin targets
Lin Yin,Brian J. Albright,Bjorn Hegelich,Kevin J. Bowers,Kirk Flippo,Thomas J. T. Kwan,Juan C. Fernández +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, a new laser-driven ion acceleration mechanism using ultrathin targets has been identified from particle-in-cell simulations, which accelerates ions to much higher energies using laser intensities comparable to earlier target normal sheath acceleration (TNSA).
Journal ArticleDOI
Transition from collisional to kinetic regimes in large-scale reconnection layers
William Daughton,Vadim Roytershteyn,Brian J. Albright,Homa Karimabadi,Lin Yin,Kevin J. Bowers +5 more
TL;DR: Using fully kinetic simulations with a Fokker-Planck collision operator, it is demonstrated that Sweet-Parker reconnection layers are unstable to plasmoids (secondary islands) for Lundquist numbers beyond S greater, similar 1000.
Journal Article
GeV Laser Ion Acceleration from Ultrathin Targets: The Laser Break-Out Afterburner
TL;DR: A new laser-driven ion acceleration mechanism has been identified using particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations in this paper, which enables the acceleration of carbon ions to greater than 2 GeV energy at a laser intensity of only 10 21 W/cm 2.