SESAME Format Tables
Group T-1 (formerly T-4) at Los Alamos National Laboratory has been
distributing opacities for more that 30 years. There have been two general
formats for this distribution. The first was the full data base, including
all of the frequency dependent data and the second was a very condensed
ASCII format called SESAME. The SESAME opacity tables are compatible with
the equation of state SESAME tables distributed by group T-1 here at the
laboratory. This Web Page is set up to provide both types of format, as
well as adding the multigroup format, which has not been widely available
in the past.
In order to use the SESAME tables, users need to get the necessary codes
from T-1 when they get the EOS library. This description is not intended
to be a detailed explanation of the SESAME format, rather it lists for the
experienced SESAME user some of the differences between the SESAME tables
obtained from this Web Page and the normal SESAME library.
1. These tables can cover any selected temperature-density range (using
the temperature list from the Web Page) instead of the standard grid.
2. The normal SESAME tables use a theoretical model to extrapolate the
table quantities (Rosseland and Planck opacities, etc) to fill in the grid
points where the opacities could not be calculated (low temperature -high
density points). These tables take the value at the highest calculated
density for each temperature and use that value for all higher densities.
On plots, this procedure makes all of the curves run together at the lower
temperatures if you have chosen densities where the opacities can not be
calculated.
3. Most SESAME library tables contain five 50X tables (Temperature-
Density boundary (501), Rosseland opacity (502), Electron Conductive
opacity (503), Mean Ion charge (504) and Planck opacity (505)). Tables
from this Web Page do not have a 503 table. If there is sufficient demand
for this table, we will try to include it.
4. Single element tables will be given the material ID number shown on the
Web Page in the
File of currently available materials. Mixtures will be assigned numbers starting at 19000 and normally
increased in increments of 1. If the Web Page is interupted (such as
hitting the STOP button on the browser), the increment may be
advanced and the mixture numbers would not be consecutive. Users can of
course change these ID numbers after they download the tables.