3,689 research outputs found
A plasma solenoid driven by an Orbital Angular Momentum laser beam
A tens of Tesla quasi-static axial magnetic field can be produced in the
interaction of a short intense laser beam carrying an Orbital Angular Momentum
with an underdense plasma. Three-dimensional "Particle In Cell" simulations and
analytical model demonstrate that orbital angular momentum is transfered from a
tightly focused radially polarized laser beam to electrons without any
dissipative effect. A theoretical model describing the balistic interaction of
electrons with laser shows that particles gain angular velocity during their
radial and longitudinal drift in the laser field. The agreement between PIC
simulations and the simplified model identifies routes to increase the
intensity of the solenoidal magnetic field by controlling the orbital angular
momentum and/or the energy of the laser beam
Instability driven formation of domains in the intermediate state of type-I superconductors
The formation of normal-state domains in type-I superconducting indium films
is investigated using the high resolution magneto-optical imaging technique.
The observed patterns consist of coexisting circular and lamellar normal-phase
domains surrounded by the superconducting phase. The distribution of domain
surface areas is found to exhibit a threshold, above which only the lamellar
shape is observed. We show that this threshold coincides with the predicted
critical surface area for the elongation instability of the circular shape. The
partition of the normal phase into circular and lamellar domains is determined
by the combined effects of the elongation instability and the penetration of
magnetic flux by bursts at the early stage of pattern formation. It is not
governed by mutual interactions between domains, as usually assumed for
self-organized systems
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