Pulsed-power-driven z-pinch plasmas are an intense
source of soft X-ray radiation producing, on the Z facility,
about 2 MJ of total radiation for a number of tungsten loads
and in the case of a multiwire titanium array over 1 MJ total
radiation and about 100 kJ from the titanium K-shell.
The production and transport of radiation in these non-LTE plasmas
are often modeled assuming some variation of Local Thermodynamic
Equilibrium (LTE) in conjunction with radiation diffusion. Since
these plasmas are neither in LTE or entirely opaque or transparent
these models do not properly predict the emitted radiation spectra
and yield. Also, application of these models overestimates the
radiation cooling to the extent that the evolving hydrodynamic
profiles are significantly different from those that would obtain
using the appropriate non-LTE model with a more realistic treatment
of the radiation transport. In this investigation, we discuss
the production and transport of radiation from the viewpoint
of the microscopic collisional and radiative processes and then
apply it to z-pinch plasmas. Through the use of examples
and illustrations, it is shown that for identical initial load
conditions, atomic level structure, and rate coefficients, the
models predict different results that affect the dynamic evolution
and hydrodynamic history of the plasma. As an example, the emission
spectrum is generated using a 1-D radiation MHD model
self-consistently coupled to a circuit representing the Sandia
Z facility. A comparison is then made between several standard
models of ionization dynamics for a multiwire titanium array.
Finally, we address some of the issues regarding how the dense
plasma environment influences isolated atom structure and
processes. These include, for example, atomic level shifts,
ionization lowering, collision cross sections, and collision
widths. Transition from the isolated-atom to the dressed-particle
picture can modify the ionization physics and emission spectra
to such an extent that it may challenge our precepts on how
best to design loads for the next generation machine.