We report on charge state measurements of laser-accelerated carbon ions in
the energy range of several MeV penetrating a dense partially ionized plasma.
The plasma was generated by irradiation of a foam target with laser-induced
hohlraum radiation in the soft X-ray regime. We used the tri-cellulose acetate
(C9βH16βO8β) foam of 2 mg/cmβ3 density, and 1-mm interaction
length as target material. This kind of plasma is advantageous for
high-precision measurements, due to good uniformity and long lifetime compared
to the ion pulse length and the interaction duration. The plasma parameters
were diagnosed to be Teβ=17 eV and neβ=4 Γ 1020 cmβ3.
The average charge states passing through the plasma were observed to be higher
than those predicted by the commonly-used semiempirical formula. Through
solving the rate equations, we attribute the enhancement to the target density
effects which will increase the ionization rates on one hand and reduce the
electron capture rates on the other hand. In previsous measurement with
partially ionized plasma from gas discharge and z-pinch to laser direct
irradiation, no target density effects were ever demonstrated. For the first
time, we were able to experimentally prove that target density effects start to
play a significant role in plasma near the critical density of Nd-Glass laser
radiation. The finding is important for heavy ion beam driven high energy
density physics and fast ignitions.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, 35 conference