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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.

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Role of electron physics in the development of turbulent magnetic reconnection in collisionless plasmas

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.
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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.
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Monoenergetic and GeV ion acceleration from the laser breakout afterburner using ultrathin targets

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).
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Transition from collisional to kinetic regimes in large-scale reconnection layers

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.