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R. C. Cauble

Researcher at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Publications -  84
Citations -  2779

R. C. Cauble is an academic researcher from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Laser & Plasma. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 83 publications receiving 2697 citations. Previous affiliations of R. C. Cauble include University of Alberta.

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Absolute equation of state measurements on shocked liquid deuterium up to 200 gpa (2 mbar)

TL;DR: In this article, the first measurements of density, shock speed, and particle speed in liquid deuterium compressed by laser-generated shock waves to pressures from 25 to 210Gpa (0.25 to 2.1Mbar).
ReportDOI

Linac coherent light source (LCLS) conceptual design report

TL;DR: The Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) as mentioned in this paper is a free-electron-laser (FEL) R&D facility operating in the wavelength range 1.5-15 angstrom, which utilizes the SLAC linac and produces sub-picosecond pulses of short wavelength x-rays with very high peak brightness and full transverse coherence.
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Shock-induced transformation of liquid deuterium into a metallic fluid

TL;DR: Simultaneous measurements of shock velocity and optical reflectance show a continuous increase in reflectance, evidence that the shocked deuterium reaches a conducting state characteristic of a metallic fluid.
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Electron Density Measurements of High Density Plasmas Using Soft X-Ray Laser Interferometry.

TL;DR: A soft x-ray interferometer is developed and used for the first time to probe a large laser-produced plasma with micron spatial resolutions and shows good agreement near the ablation surface but some discrepancy exists at lower densities.
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Experimental configuration for isentropic compression of solids using pulsed magnetic loading

TL;DR: Hall as mentioned in this paper describes a modular configuration that improves the uniformity of loading over the sample surface, allows materials to be easily attached to the magnetically loaded sample, and improves the quality of data obtained.