Understanding the behaviour of matter under conditions of extreme temperature, pressure, density and electromagnetic fields has profound effects on our understanding of cosmologic objects and the formation of the universe. Lacking direct access to such objects, our interpretation of observed data mainly relies on theoretical models. However, such models, which need to encompass nuclear physics, atomic physics and plasma physics over a huge dynamic range in the dimensions of energy and time, can only provide reliable information if we can benchmark them to experiments under well-defined laboratory conditions. Due to the plethora of effects occurring in this kind of highly excited matter, characterizing isolated dynamics or obtaining direct insight remains challenging. High-density plasmas are turbulent and opaque for radiation below the plasma frequency and allow only near-surface insight into ionization processes with visible wavelengths. Here, the output of a high-harmonic seeded laser-plasma amplifier using eight-fold ionized krypton as the gain medium operating at a 32.8 nm wavelength is ptychographically imaged. A complex-valued wavefront is observed in the extreme ultraviolet (XUV) beam with high resolution. Ab initio spatio-temporal Maxwell–Bloch simulations show excellent agreement with the experimental observations, revealing overionization of krypton in the plasma channel due to nonlinear laser-plasma interactions, successfully validating this four-dimensional multiscale model. This constitutes the first experimental observation of the laser ion abundance reshaping a laser-plasma amplifier. The presented approach shows the possibility of directly modelling light-plasma interactions in extreme conditions, such as those present during the early times of the universe, with direct experimental verification.
Recently we have shown that light-field photography images can be interpreted as limited-angle cone-beam tomography acquisitions. Here, we use this property to develop a direct-space tomographic refocusing formulation that allows one to refocus both unfocused and focused light-field images. We express the reconstruction as a convex optimization problem, thus enabling the use of various regularization terms to help suppress artifacts, and a wide class of existing advanced tomographic algorithms. This formulation also supports super-resolved reconstructions and the correction of the optical system's limited frequency response (point spread function). We validate this method with numerical and real-world examples.
Modelling plasma-based seeded soft X-ray lasers from the creation of the plasma to the propagation of a femtosecond high-order harmonic (HOH) seed throughout several millimetres of inhomogeneous plasma is a complex challenge. Different spatio-temporal scales from the hydrodynamic evolution of the plasma (hundreds of micrometres and nanoseconds) to the propagation of pulses through the plasma (millimetres and tens of picoseconds), electron collisions (picoseconds or even shorter) and the evolution of the envelope of the seeded HOH (tens of femtoseconds) must be tackled in order to fully understand these systems. In this paper, we will present the multi-scale computational paradigm that we have used to perform a full ab initio simulation of a dense, Ni-like Krypton plasma amplifier of soft X-rays. Results of the modelling and expected future applications will also be shown.
Optical field ionized (OFI) plasma amplifiers have recently demonstrated sub-picosecond pulses when seeded with high order harmonics. In addition to this, the intensity and phase profile of the amplified harmonic beams carry information about possible plasma inhomogeneities (electron density, lasing ion abundance) that may appear in the amplifier. 1D and 3D modelling has played a fundamental role in these results and it will be required to support present and future experiments. This modelling involves different physical processes and time-scales, from the nanoseconds (hydrodynamics) to the picoseconds (atomic physics) and femtoseconds (dynamics of the amplified beam). Here we briefly present the different codes that have been coupled to fully model this process, from the creation of the plasma to the amplification of XUV and soft X-ray,s and show how this framework can be applied to study the impact of plasma inhomogeneities in the intensity and phase profile of the amplified beam.
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