146 research outputs found
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Laser-driven acceleration of quasi-monoenergetic, near-collimated titanium ions via a transparency-enhanced acceleration scheme
Laser-driven ion acceleration has been an active research area in the past two decades with the prospects of designing novel and compact ion accelerators. Many potential applications in science and industry require high-quality, energetic ion beams with low divergence and narrow energy spread. Intense laser ion acceleration research strives to meet these challenges and may provide high charge state beams, with some successes for carbon and lighter ions. Here we demonstrate the generation of well collimated, quasi-monoenergetic titanium ions with energies ∼145 and 180 MeV in experiments using the high-contrast(<10-9) and high-intensity (6× 1020 W cm-2) Trident laser and ultra-Thin (∼100 nm) titanium foil targets. Numerical simulations show that the foils become transparent to the laser pulses, undergoing relativistically induced transparency (RIT), resulting in a two-stage acceleration process which lasts until ∼2 ps after the onset of RIT. Such long acceleration time in the self-generated electric fields in the expanding plasma enables the formation of the quasi-monoenergetic peaks. This work contributes to the better understanding of the acceleration of heavier ions in the RIT regime, towards the development of next generation laser-based ion accelerators for various applications
Thermal conductivity measurements of proton-heated warm dense aluminum.
Thermal conductivity is one of the most crucial physical properties of matter when it comes to understanding heat transport, hydrodynamic evolution, and energy balance in systems ranging from astrophysical objects to fusion plasmas. In the warm dense matter regime, experimental data are very scarce so that many theoretical models remain untested. Here we present the first thermal conductivity measurements of aluminum at 0.5-2.7 g/cc and 2-10 eV, using a recently developed platform of differential heating. A temperature gradient is induced in a Au/Al dual-layer target by proton heating, and subsequent heat flow from the hotter Au to the Al rear surface is detected by two simultaneous time-resolved diagnostics. A systematic data set allows for constraining both thermal conductivity and equation-of-state models. Simulations using Purgatorio model or Sesame S27314 for Al thermal conductivity and LEOS for Au/Al release equation-of-state show good agreement with data after 15 ps. Discrepancy still exists at early time 0-15 ps, likely due to non-equilibrium conditions
Anomalous material-dependent transport of focused, laser-driven proton beams.
Intense lasers can accelerate protons in sufficient numbers and energy that the resulting beam can heat materials to exotic warm (10 s of eV temperature) states. Here we show with experimental data that a laser-driven proton beam focused onto a target heated it in a localized spot with size strongly dependent upon material and as small as 35 μm radius. Simulations indicate that cold stopping power values cannot model the intense proton beam transport in solid targets well enough to match the large differences observed. In the experiment a 74 J, 670 fs laser drove a focusing proton beam that transported through different thicknesses of solid Mylar, Al, Cu or Au, eventually heating a rear, thin, Au witness layer. The XUV emission seen from the rear of the Au indicated a clear dependence of proton beam transport upon atomic number, Z, of the transport layer: a larger and brighter emission spot was measured after proton transport through the lower Z foils even with equal mass density for supposed equivalent proton stopping range. Beam transport dynamics pertaining to the observed heated spot were investigated numerically with a particle-in-cell (PIC) code. In simulations protons moving through an Al transport layer result in higher Au temperature responsible for higher Au radiant emittance compared to a Cu transport case. The inferred finding that proton stopping varies with temperature in different materials, considerably changing the beam heating profile, can guide applications seeking to controllably heat targets with intense proton beams
Plasma focus based repetitive source of fusion neutrons and hard x-rays
A plasma focus device capable of operating at 0.2 pulses per second during
several minutes is used as a source of hard x-rays and fast neutrons. An
experimental demonstration of the use of the neutrons emissions for radiation
probing of hydrogenated substances is presented, showing a particular
application in detecting water concentrations differences in the proximity of
the device by elastic scattering. Moreover, the device produces ultrashort hard
x-rays pulses useful for introspective images of small objects, static or in
fast motion, suitable for the identification of internal submillimetric
defects. Clear images of metallic objects shielded by several millimeters iron
walls are shown.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figure
Exploring extreme magnetization phenomena in directly driven imploding cylindrical targets
This paper uses extended-magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) simulations to explore an extreme magnetized plasma regime realizable by cylindrical implosions on the OMEGA laser facility. This regime is characterized by highly compressed magnetic fields (greater than 10 kT across the fuel), which contain a significant proportion of the implosion energy and induce large electrical currents in the plasma. Parameters governing the different magnetization processes such as Ohmic dissipation and suppression of instabilities by magnetic tension are presented, allowing for optimization of experiments to study specific phenomena. For instance, a dopant added to the target gas-fill can enhance magnetic flux compression while enabling spectroscopic diagnosis of the imploding core. In particular, the use of Ar K-shell spectroscopy is investigated by performing detailed non-LTE atomic kinetics and radiative transfer calculations on the MHD data. Direct measurement of the core electron density and temperature would be possible, allowing for both the impact of magnetization on the final temperature and thermal pressure to be obtained. By assuming the magnetic field is frozen into the plasma motion, which is shown to be a good approximation for highly magnetized implosions, spectroscopic diagnosis could be used to estimate which magnetization processes are ruling the implosion dynamics; for example, a relation is given for inferring whether thermally driven or current-driven transport is dominating
Time-resolved measurements of fast electron recirculation for relativistically intense femtosecond scale laser-plasma interactions
A key issue in realising the development of a number of applications of high-intensity lasers is the dynamics of the fast electrons produced and how to diagnose them. We report on measurements of fast electron transport in aluminium targets in the ultra-intense, short-pulse (<50 fs) regime using a high resolution temporally and spatially resolved optical probe. The measurements show a rapidly (≈0.5c) expanding region of Ohmic heating at the rear of the target, driven by lateral transport of the fast electron population inside the target. Simulations demonstrate that a broad angular distribution of fast electrons on the order of 60° is required, in conjunction with extensive recirculation of the electron population, in order to drive such lateral transport. These results provide fundamental new insight into fast electron dynamics driven by ultra-short laser pulses, which is an important regime for the development of laser-based radiation and particle sources
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Laser reflection as a catalyst for direct laser acceleration in multipicosecond laser-plasma interaction
We demonstrate that laser reflection acts as a catalyst for
superponderomotive electron production in the preplasma formed by relativistic
multipicosecond lasers incident on solid density targets. In 1D
particle-in-cell simulations, high energy electron production proceeds via two
stages of direct laser acceleration, an initial stochastic backward stage, and
a final non-stochastic forward stage. The initial stochastic stage, driven by
the reflected laser pulse, provides the pre-acceleration needed to enable the
final stage to be non-stochastic. Energy gain in the electrostatic potential,
which has been frequently considered to enhance stochastic heating, is only of
secondary importance. The mechanism underlying the production of high energy
electrons by laser pulses incident on solid density targets is of direct
relevance to applications involving multipicosecond laser-plasma interactions
Laser reflection as a catalyst for direct laser acceleration in multipicosecond laser-plasma interaction
We demonstrate that laser reflection acts as a catalyst for
superponderomotive electron production in the preplasma formed by relativistic
multipicosecond lasers incident on solid density targets. In 1D
particle-in-cell simulations, high energy electron production proceeds via two
stages of direct laser acceleration, an initial stochastic backward stage, and
a final non-stochastic forward stage. The initial stochastic stage, driven by
the reflected laser pulse, provides the pre-acceleration needed to enable the
final stage to be non-stochastic. Energy gain in the electrostatic potential,
which has been frequently considered to enhance stochastic heating, is only of
secondary importance. The mechanism underlying the production of high energy
electrons by laser pulses incident on solid density targets is of direct
relevance to applications involving multipicosecond laser-plasma interactions
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