387 research outputs found
Three-dimensional fast electron transport for ignition-scale inertial fusion capsules
Three-dimensional hybrid PIC simulations are presented to study electron
energy transport and deposition in a full-scale fast ignition configuration.
Multi-prong core heating close to ignition is found when a few GA, few PW beam
is injected. Resistive beam filamentation in the corona seeds the 3D current
pattern that penetrates the core. Ohmic heating is important in the low-density
corona, while classical Coulomb deposition heats the core. Here highest energy
densities (few Tbar at 10 keV) are observed at densities above 200 g/cc. Energy
coupling to the core ranges from 20 to 30%; it is enhanced by beam collimation
and decreases when raising the beam particle energy from 1.5 to 5.5 MeV.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
On collisional free-free photon absorption in warm dense matter
The rate of photon absorption in warm dense matter (WDM) induced by free-free
electron-ion collisions is derived from Sommerfeld's cross-section for
non-relativistic bremsstrahlung emission, making use of detailed balance
relations. Warm dense matter is treated as a metal-like state in the
approximation of a uniform degenerate electron gas and a uniform ion
background. Total absorption rates are averaged over the electron Fermi
distribution. A closed expression is obtained for the absorption rate,
depending on temperature, density, and photon energy, that scales with ion
charge Z. It is evaluated numerically for the full parameter space, which
requires different representations of the hypergeometric functions involved.
The results are valid for photon frequencies larger than the plasma frequency
of the medium. They are compared with approximate formulas in various
asymptotic regions
Giant half-cycle attosecond pulses
Half-cycle picosecond pulses have been produced from thin photo-conductors,
when applying an electric field across the surface and switching on conduction
by a short laser pulse. Then the transverse current in the wafer plane emits
half-cycle pulses in normal direction, and pulses of 500 fs duration and 1e6
V/m peak electric field have been observed. Here we show that single half-cycle
pulses of 50 as duration and up to 1e13 V/m can be produced when irradiating a
double foil target by intense few-cycle laser pulses. Focused onto an
ultra-thin foil, all electrons are blown out, forming a uniform sheet of
relativistic electrons. A second layer, placed at some distance behind,
reflects the drive beam, but lets electrons pass straight. Under oblique
incidence, beam reflection provides the transverse current, which emits intense
half-cycle pulses. Such a pulse may completely ionize even heavier atoms. New
types of attosecond pump-probe experiments will become possible.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to be presented at LEI2011-Light at Extreme
Intensities and China-Germany Symposium on Laser Acceleratio
Self-trapping and acceleration of ions in laser-driven relativistically transparent plasma
Self-trapping and acceleration of ions in laser-driven relativistically
transparent plasma are investigated with the help of particle-in-cell
simulations. A theoretical model based on ion wave breaking is established in
describing ion evolution and ion trapping. The threshold for ion trapping is
identified. Near the threshold ion trapping is self-regulating and stops when
the number of trapped ions is large enough. The model is applied to ion
trapping in three-dimensional geometry. Longitudinal distributions of ions and
the electric field near the wave breaking point are derived analytically in
terms of power-law scalings. The areal density of trapped charge is obtained as
a function of the strength of ion wave breaking, which scales with target
density for fixed laser intensity. The results of the model are confirmed by
the simulations
Fast ignition of inertial fusion targets by laser-driven carbon beams
Two-dimensional simulations of ion beam driven fast ignition are presented.
Ignition energies of protons with Maxwellian spectrum and carbon ions with
quasimonoenergetic and Maxwellian energy distributions are evaluated. The
effect of the coronal plasma surrounding the compressed deuterium-tritium is
studied for three different fuel density distributions. It is found that quasi-
monoenergetic ions have better coupling with the compressed deuterium-tritium
and substantially lower ignition energies. Comparison of quasimonoenergetic
carbon ions and relativistic electrons as ignitor beams shows similar laser
energy requirements, provided that a laser to quasimonoenergetic carbon ion
conversion efficiency around 10% can be achieved.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, published in Physics of Plasma
The reflectivity of relativistic ultra-thin electron layers
The coherent reflectivity of a dense, relativistic, ultra-thin electron layer
is derived analytically for an obliquely incident probe beam. Results are
obtained by two-fold Lorentz transformation. For the analytical treatment, a
plane uniform electron layer is considered. All electrons move with uniform
velocity under an angle to the normal direction of the plane; such electron
motion corresponds to laser acceleration by direct action of the laser fields,
as it is described in a companion paper. Electron density is chosen high enough
to ensure that many electrons reside in a volume \lambda_R^3, where \lambda_R
is the wavelength of the reflected light in the rest frame of the layer. Under
these conditions, the probe light is back-scattered coherently and is directed
close to the layer normal rather than the direction of electron velocity. An
important consequence is that the Doppler shift is governed by
\gamma_x=(1-(V_x/c)^2)^{-1/2} derived from the electron velocity component V_x
in normal direction rather than the full \gamma-factor of the layer electrons.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, submitted to the special issue "Fundamental
Physics with Ultra-High Fields" in The European Physical Journal
Acceleration of ultra-thin electron layer. Analytical treatment compared with 1D-PIC simulation
In this paper, we apply an analytical model [V.V. Kulagin et al., Phys.
Plasmas 14,113101 (2007)] to describe the acceleration of an ultra-thin
electron layer by a schematic single-cycle laser pulse and compare with
one-dimensional particle-in-cell (1D-PIC) simulations. This is in the context
of creating a relativistic mirror for coherent backscattering and supplements
two related papers in this EPJD volume. The model is shown to reproduce the
1D-PIC results almost quantitatively for the short time of a few laser periods
sufficient for the backscattering of ultra-short probe pulses.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to the special issue "Fundamental
Physics with Ultra-High Fields" in The European Physical Journal
- …