5 research outputs found

    Plasma lensing of a laser wakefield accelerated electron bunch

    Get PDF
    We report on the first all-optical demonstration of plasma lensing using laser wakefield accelerated elec-trons in a two-stage setup. The LWFA electron bunch was focused by a second plasma stage without any ex-ternal fields applied..

    Quantitative shadowgraphy and proton radiography for large intensity modulations

    No full text
    Shadowgraphy is a technique widely used to diagnose objects or systems in various fields in physics and engineering. In shadowgraphy, an optical beam is deflected by the object and then the intensity modulation is captured on a screen placed some distance away. However, retrieving quantitative information from the shadowgrams themselves is a challenging task because of the non-linear nature of the process. Here, a novel method to retrieve quantitative information from shadowgrams, based on computational geometry, is presented for the first time. This process can also be applied to proton radiography for electric and magnetic field diagnosis in high-energy-density plasmas and has been benchmarked using a toroidal magnetic field as the object, among others. It is shown that the method can accurately retrieve quantitative parameters with error bars less than 10%, even when caustics are present. The method is also shown to be robust enough to process real experimental results with simple pre- and post-processing techniques. This adds a powerful new tool for research in various fields in engineering and physics for both techniques

    Quantitative shadowgraphy and proton radiography for large intensity modulations

    No full text
    Shadowgraphy is a technique widely used to diagnose objects or systems in various fields in physics and engineering. In shadowgraphy, an optical beam is deflected by the object and then the intensity modulation is captured on a screen placed some distance away. However, retrieving quantitative information from the shadowgrams themselves is a challenging task because of the non-linear nature of the process. Here, a novel method to retrieve quantitative information from shadowgrams, based on computational geometry, is presented for the first time. This process can also be applied to proton radiography for electric and magnetic field diagnosis in high-energy-density plasmas and has been benchmarked using a toroidal magnetic field as the object, among others. It is shown that the method can accurately retrieve quantitative parameters with error bars less than 10%, even when caustics are present. The method is also shown to be robust enough to process real experimental results with simple pre- and post-processing techniques. This adds a powerful new tool for research in various fields in engineering and physics for both techniques

    Current and planned future experiments with relativistic high harmonic generation using the JETI200 laser

    No full text
    High-order harmonic generation (HHG) through nonlinear interaction of intense laser beams with different systems is a promising source of bright, ultra-short bursts of extreme-ultraviolet radiation. High harmonics arise since the radiation is emitted as a train of attosecond pulses. A key objective is to achieve a single isolated pulse to allow time resolved measurements characterized by these pulses on an attosecond scale. We carried out experiments into JETI200 facility in Jena, Germany in order to characterize the properties of the harmonic radiation generated from a solid surface interaction, with the ultimate goal of employing temporal gating schemes to reduce the attosecond pulse train to a single pulse. The reason this laser is well suited for such experiment is a combination of its high power and the fact it is “quasi”-few-cycle (6.39 cycles) ideal for trying out gating scheme
    corecore