27 research outputs found

    Characterisation and Modelling of Ultrashort Laser-Driven Electromagnetic Pulses

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    Recent advances on laser technology have enabled the generation of ultrashort (fs) high power (PW) laser systems. For such large scale laser facilities there is an imperative demand for high repetition rate operation in symbiosis with beamlines or end-stations. In such extreme conditions the generation of electromagnetic pulses (EMP) during high intense laser target interaction experiments can tip the scale for the good outcome of the campaign. The EMP effects are several including interference with diagnostic devices and actuators as well as damage of electrical components. The EMP issue is quite known in the picosecond (ps) pulse laser experiments but no systematic study on EMP issues at multi-Joule fs-class lasers has been conducted thus far. In this paper we report the first experimental campaign for EMP-measurements performed at the 200 TW laser system (VEGA 2) at CLPU laser center. EMP pulse energy has been measured as a function of the laser intensity and energy together with other relevant quantities such as (i) the charge of the laser-driven protons and their maximum energy, as well as (ii) the X-ray K-alpha emission coming from electron interaction inside the target. Analysis of experimental results demonstrate (and confirm) a direct correlation between the measured EMP pulse energy and the laser parameters such as laser intensity and laser energy in the ultrashort pulse duration regime. Numerical FEM (Finite Element Method) simulations of the EMP generated by the target holder system have been performed and the simulations results are shown to be in good agreement with the experimental ones

    Ion acceleration with few cycle relativistic laser pulses from foil targets

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    Ion acceleration resulting from the interaction of 11 fs laser pulses of ~35 mJ energy with ultrahigh contrast (<10^-10), and 10^19 W/cm^2 peak intensity with foil targets made of various materials and thicknesses at normal (0-degree) and 45-degree laser incidence is investigated. The maximum energy of the protons accelerated from both the rear and front sides of the target was above 1 MeV. A conversion efficiency from laser pulse energy to proton beam is estimated to be as high as ~1.4 % at 45-degree laser incidence using a 51 nm-thick Al target. The excellent laser contrast indicates the predominance of vacuum heating via the Brunels effect as an absorption mechanism involving a tiny pre-plasma of natural origin due to the Gaussian temporal laser pulse shape. Experimental results are in reasonable agreement with theoretical estimates where proton acceleration from the target rear into the forward direction is well explained by a TNSA-like mechanism, while proton acceleration from the target front into the backward direction can be explained by the formation of a charged cavity in a tiny pre-plasma. The exploding Coulomb field from the charged cavity also serves as a source for forward-accelerated ions at thick targets.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures

    Current fluctuations in boundary driven diffusive systems in different dimensions : a numerical study

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    We use kinetic Monte Carlo simulations to investigate current fluctuations in boundary driven generalized exclusion processes, in different dimensions. Simulation results are in full agreement with predictions based on the additivity principle and the macroscopic fluctuation theory. The current statistics are independent of the shape of the contacts with the reservoirs, provided they are macroscopic in size. In general, the current distribution depends on the spatial dimension. For the special cases of the symmetric simple exclusion process and the zero-range process, the current statistics are the same for all spatial dimensions.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, published versio

    Dynamics of topological defects and the effects of the cooling rate on finite-size two-dimensional screened Coulomb clusters

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    The formation of dislocations, disclinations and their dynamics is central to our understanding of crystalline materials. Here, the dynamics of these topological defects in two-dimensional (2D) clusters of charged classical particles interacting through a screened Coulomb potential is investigated through the molecular-dynamics (MD) simulation technique. The particles are confined by a harmonic potential and coupled to an Anderson heat reservoir. We investigate cooling rate effects on the defect dynamics by decreasing the temperature of the heat reservoir linear in time. We found that: i) the mobility of the defects strongly depends on the number of nearest neighbors and the nature of those defects, ii) geometrically induced defects have different dynamics than other defects because of spontaneous pinning of the defects at the corners of the hexagon, and iii) if the cooling speed is large enough, the system ends up in a non-equilibrium state and a glass-like structure is formed
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