68 research outputs found
Parametric attosecond pulse amplification far from the ionization threshold from high order harmonic generation in He
Parametric amplification of attosecond coherent pulses around 100 eV at the
single-atom level is demonstrated for the first time by using the 3D
time-dependent Schr{\"o}dinger equation in high-harmonic generation processes
from excited states of He. We present the attosecond dynamics of the
amplification process far from the ionization threshold and resolve the physics
behind it. The amplification of a particular central photon energy requires the
seed XUV pulses to be perfectly synchronized in time with the driving laser
field for stimulated recombination to the He ground state and is only
produced in a few specific laser cycles in agreement with the experimental
measurements. Our simulations show that the amplified photon energy region can
be controlled by varying the peak intensity of the laser field. Our results
pave the way to the realization of compact attosecond pulse intense XUV lasers
with broad applications
Construction of a magnetic bottle spectrometer and its application to pulse duration measurement of X-ray laser using a pump-probe method
To characterize the temporal evolution of ultrashort X-ray pulses emitted by laser plasmas using a pump-probe method, a magnetic bottle time-of-flight electron spectrometer is constructed. The design is determined by numerical calculations of a mirror magnetic field and of the electron trajectory in a flight tube. The performance of the spectrometer is characterized by measuring the electron spectra of xenon atoms irradiated with a laser-driven plasma X-ray pulse. In addition, two-color above-threshold ionization (ATI) experiment is conducted for measurement of the X-ray laser pulse duration, in which xenon atoms are simultaneously irradiated with an X-ray laser pump and an IR laser probe. The correlation in the intensity of the sideband spectra of the 4d inner-shell photoelectrons and in the time delay of the two laser pulses yields an X-ray pulse width of 5.7 ps, in good agreement with the value obtained using an X-ray streak camera.This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research B (No. 26286078) from the Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science. We thank the JAEA X-ray laser research group for laser operations. This work was performed under the shared use program of JAEA Facilities
Spallative ablation of dielectrics by X-ray laser
Short laser pulse in wide range of wavelengths, from infrared to X-ray,
disturbs electron-ion equilibrium and rises pressure in a heated layer. The
case where pulse duration is shorter than acoustic relaxation time
is considered in the paper. It is shown that this short pulse may cause
thermomechanical phenomena such as spallative ablation regardless to
wavelength. While the physics of electron-ion relaxation on wavelength and
various electron spectra of substances: there are spectra with an energy gap in
semiconductors and dielectrics opposed to gapless continuous spectra in metals.
The paper describes entire sequence of thermomechanical processes from
expansion, nucleation, foaming, and nanostructuring to spallation with
particular attention to spallation by X-ray pulse
High-order alloharmonics produced by nonperiodic drivers
High-order harmonics are ubiquitous in nature and present in electromagnetic,
acoustic, and gravitational waves. They are generated by periodic nonlinear
processes or periodic high-frequency pulses. However, this periodicity is often
inexact, such as that in chirped (frequency-swept) optical waveforms or
interactions with nonstationary matter -- for instance, reflection from
accelerating mirrors. Spectra observed in such cases contain complicated sets
of harmonic-like fringes. We encountered such fringes in our experiment on
coherent extreme ultraviolet generation via BISER, and could not interpret them
using currently available knowledge. Here, we present a comprehensive theory
based on interference of harmonics with different orders fully explaining the
formation of these fringes, which we call alloharmonics. Like atomic spectra,
the complex alloharmonic spectra depend on several integer numbers and bear a
unique imprint of the emission process, which the theory can decipher, avoiding
confusion or misinterpretation. We also demonstrate the alloharmonics in
simulations of gravitational waves emitted by binary black hole mergers.
Further, we predict the presence of alloharmonics in the radio spectra of
pulsars and in optical frequency combs, and propose their use for measurement
of extremely small accelerations necessary for testing gravity theories. The
alloharmonics phenomenon generalizes classical harmonics and is critical in
research fields such as laser mode locking, frequency comb generation,
attosecond pulse generation, pulsar studies, and future gravitational wave
spectroscopy.Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures, 3 table
Numerical analysis of plasma medium of transient collisional excited X-ray laser
Two-dimensional (2D) radiation hydrodynamics simulations have been
performed to investigate the refraction influence and the gain
property in the plasma medium of the x-ray laser. The local energy
deposition of the main pumping pulse generates a blast wave near the
critical density surface, and the density dip structure is gradually
formed behind the blast wave. The three-dimensional (3D) ray-trace
calculation using the result of the 2D simulation shows the x-rays
pass through the density dip with less refraction
Construction of a magnetic bottle spectrometer and its application to pulse duration measurement of X-ray laser using a pump-probe method
To characterize the temporal evolution of ultrashort X-ray pulses emitted by laser plasmas using a pump-probe method, a magnetic bottle time-of-flight electron spectrometer is constructed. The design is determined by numerical calculations of a mirror magnetic field and of the electron trajectory in a flight tube. The performance of the spectrometer is characterized by measuring the electron spectra of xenon atoms irradiated with a laser-driven plasma X-ray pulse. In addition, two-color above-threshold ionization (ATI) experiment is conducted for measurement of the X-ray laser pulse duration, in which xenon atoms are simultaneously irradiated with an X-ray laser pump and an IR laser probe. The correlation in the intensity of the sideband spectra of the 4d inner-shell photoelectrons and in the time delay of the two laser pulses yields an X-ray pulse width of 5.7 ps, in good agreement with the value obtained using an X-ray streak camera
Observation of gain coefficients of 15.47 nm Li-like Al soft x-ray laser in a recombining plasma pumped by a compact YAG laser
A Li-like Al soft x-ray laser oscillation (15.47 nm) by means of recombination plasma scheme was investigated to enhance the gain coefficent of lasing medium. In this study, we employed a Nd:YAG laser pulse composed of 8-pulse train, in which each pulse width was 400 ps and its interpulse time was 400 ps. The laser beam was tightly line-focused into 50 μm in height and 12 mm in length on Al slab target by using prism lens array. The created cylindrical plasma showed that with increasing plasma length the lasing intensity at 15.47 nm increased expoentially up to 3.5 mm. For the laser energy of 3 J, the gain coefficient was 8.3 cm−1. Above 3.5 mm in length, the signals seemed to increase linearly, indicating that the lasing action reached the saturation regime
- …