Generation of photoionized plasmas in the laboratory of relevance to accretion-powered x-ray sources using keV line radiation
D. Riley, R.L. Singh, S White, M. Charlwood, D. Bailie, C. Hyland, T., Audet, G. Sarri, B. Kettle, G. Gribakin, S.J. Rose, E.G. Hill, G.J. Ferland,, R.J.R. Williams, F.P. Keenan

TL;DR
This paper reports laboratory generation of photoionized plasmas using keV X-ray sources, achieving conditions relevant to astrophysical X-ray sources, and compares experimental results with plasma modeling codes.
Contribution
It demonstrates the creation of astrophysically relevant photoionized plasmas with keV line radiation and compares experimental data with plasma simulation codes, highlighting their agreement and discrepancies.
Findings
Achieved photoionization parameter {5} > 50 ergcm/s
Generated ionization ratios consistent with blackbody sources
Identified limitations in plasma code predictions for highly ionized species
Abstract
We describe laboratory experiments to generate X-ray photoionized plasmas of relevance to accretion-powered X-ray sources such as neutron star binaries and quasars, with significant improvements over previous work. A key quantity is referenced, namely the photoionization parameter. This is normally meaningful in an astrophysical steady-state context, but is also commonly used in the literature as a figure of merit for laboratory experiments that are, of necessity, time-dependent. We demonstrate emission-weighted values of {\xi} > 50 ergcm/s using laser-plasma X-ray sources, with higher results at the centre of the plasma which are in the regime of interest for several astrophysical scenarios. Comparisons of laboratory experiments with astrophysical codes are always limited, principally by the many orders of magnitude differences in time and spatial scales, but also other plasma…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLaser-Plasma Interactions and Diagnostics · Laser Design and Applications · Particle Detector Development and Performance
