We report on the acceleration of ion beams from ultrathin diamondlike carbon foils of thickness 50, 30, and 10 nm irradiated by ultrahigh contrast laser pulses at intensities of approximately 7 x 10;{19} W/cm;{2}. An unprecedented maximum energy of 185 MeV (15 MeV/u) for fully ionized carbon atoms is observed at the optimum thickness of 30 nm. The enhanced acceleration is attributed to self-induced transparency, leading to strong volumetric heating of the classically overdense electron population in the bulk of the target. Our experimental results are supported by both particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations and an analytical model.
Laser-driven coherent extreme-ultraviolet (XUV) sources provide pulses lasting a few hundred attoseconds 1,2 , enabling real-time access to dynamic changes of the electronic structure of matter 3,4 , the fastest processes outside the atomic nucleus. These pulses, however, are typically rather weak. Exploiting the ultrahigh brilliance of accelerator-based XUV sources 5 and the unique time structure of their laser-based counterparts would open intriguing opportunities in ultrafast X-ray and high-field science, extending powerful nonlinear optical and pump-probe techniques towards X-ray frequencies, and paving the way towards unequalled radiation intensities. Relativistic laser-plasma interactions have been identified as a promising approach to achieve this goal 6-13 . Recent experiments confirmed that relativistically driven overdense plasmas are able to convert infrared laser light into harmonic XUV radiation with unparalleled efficiency, and demonstrated the scalability of the generation technique towards hard X-rays 14-19 . Here we show that the phases of the XUV harmonics emanating from the interaction processes are synchronized, and therefore enable attosecond temporal bunching. Along with the previous findings concerning energy conversion and recent advances in high-power laser technology, our experiment demonstrates the feasibility of confining unprecedented amounts of light energy to within less than one femtosecond.The nonlinear response of matter exposed to intense femtosecond laser pulses gives rise to the emission of highfrequency radiation at harmonics of the laser oscillation frequency. If the harmonics are phase-locked, their superposition results in a train of attosecond bursts 20 . The concept has been so far successfully implemented in atomic gases 21 , and culminated in isolated attosecond pulses by using few-cycle laser drivers 1,2 . The low generation efficiency of harmonic radiation from atoms has motivated research into alternative concepts. Dense, femtosecond-laser-produced plasmas hold promise of converting laser light into coherent harmonics with much higher efficiency and of exploiting much higher laser intensities, because the plasma medium-in contrast to the atomic emitters-imposes no restriction on the strength of the laser field driving the harmonics [6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13] . Recent experimental studies of harmonics produced from overdense plasmas impressively corroborate several theoretical predictions: the high conversion efficiency 19 , the favourable scalability of the generation technique towards high photon energies 14,16,19 and excellent divergence due to the spatial coherence of the generated harmonics 19,22 . Whether the high-order harmonics that are produced in overdense plasmas • gold-coated off-axis parabolic mirror with the same focal length as the laser focusing parabola. The recollimating mirror is mounted on a flipper stage for easy withdrawal, thus enabling the spectral characterization of the emitted XUV light. Thin metal filters (typically 150 nm Al, In or Sn)...
When a pulse of light reflects from a mirror that is travelling close to the speed of light, Einstein's theory of relativity predicts that it will be up-shifted to a substantially higher frequency and compressed to a much shorter duration. This scenario is realized by the relativistically oscillating plasma surface generated by an ultraintense laser focused onto a solid target. Until now, it has been unclear whether the conditions necessary to exploit such phenomena can survive such an extreme interaction with increasing laser intensity. Here, we provide the first quantitative evidence to suggest that they can. We show that the occurrence of surface smoothing on the scale of the wavelength of the generated harmonics, and plasma denting of the irradiated surface, enables the production of high-quality X-ray beams focused down to the diffraction limit. These results improve the outlook for generating extreme X-ray fields, which could in principle extend to the Schwinger limit
Narrow bandwidth, high energy photon sources can be generated by Thomson scattering of laser light from energetic electrons, and detailed control of the interaction is needed to produce high quality sources. We present analytic calculations of the energy-angular spectra and photon yield that parametrize the influences of the electron and laser beam parameters to allow source design.These calculations, combined with numerical simulations, are applied to evaluate sources using conventional scattering in vacuum and methods for improving the source via laser waveguides or plasma channels. We show that the photon flux can be greatly increased by using a plasma channel to guide the laser during the interaction. Conversely, we show that to produce a given number of photons, the required laser energy can be reduced by an order of magnitude through the use of a plasma channel. In addition, we show that a plasma can be used as a compact beam dump, in which the electron beam is decelerated in a short distance, thereby greatly reducing radiation shielding. Realistic experimental errors such as transverse jitter are quantitatively shown to be tolerable. Examples of designs for sources capable of performing nuclear resonance fluorescence and photofission are provided. * SRykovanov@lbl.gov † CGRGeddes@lbl.gov
Extreme ultraviolet (XUV) and X-ray harmonic spectra produced by intense laser-solid interactions have, so far, been consistent with Doppler upshifted reflection from collective relativistic plasma oscillations-the relativistically oscillating mirror mechanism 1-6. Recent theoretical work, however, has identified a new interaction regime in which dense electron nanobunches are formed at the plasma-vacuum boundary resulting in coherent XUV radiation by coherent synchrotron emission 7,8 (CSE). Our experiments enable the isolation of CSE from competing processes, demonstrating that electron nanobunch formation does indeed occur. We observe spectra with the characteristic spectral signature of CSE-a slow decay of intensity, I, with high-harmonic order, n, as I(n) ∝ n −1.62 before a rapid efficiency rollover. Particle-in-cell code simulations reveal how dense nanobunches of electrons are periodically formed and accelerated during normal-incidence interactions with ultrathin foils and result in CSE in the transmitted direction. This observation of CSE presents a route to high-energy XUV pulses 7,8 and offers a new window on understanding ultrafast energy coupling during intense laser-solid density interactions. Relativistic laser plasmas have been shown to support the generation of bright beams of XUV radiation with attosecond duration 9 and high spatial quality 10 in reflection. Experimental observations 5,10,11 in the spectral region above the maximum plasma frequency of the interaction 12 (ω pmax) are consistent with a relativistic Doppler effect provided by a highly reflective critical density plasma surface collectively oscillating in the intense field of the incident laser pulse 1-4. This periodic upshifting of the driving radiation into the specularly reflected direction results in harmonic spectra consistent with the relativistically oscillating mirror (ROM) mechanism characterized by I (n) ROM ∝ n −8/3 scaling 4,5 , where n is the harmonic order. It should be noted that there is another mechanism that can dominate for frequencies below ω pmax of the target-coherent wake emission. Here we exclusively discuss harmonic frequencies above ω pmax for our interaction densities. Studies into how laser energy couples to relativistic plasmas, however, have revealed a fundamentally different mechanism for coherent XUV/X-ray generation. Simulations show that dense nanobunches of electrons can be periodically formed
The Petaflops supercomputer "Zhores" recently launched in the "Center for Computational and Data-Intensive Science and Engineering" (CDISE) of Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech) opens up new exciting opportunities for scientific discoveries in the institute especially in the areas of data-driven modeling, machine learning and artificial intelligence. This supercomputer utilizes the latest generation of Intel and NVidia processors to provide resources for the most compute intensive tasks of the Skoltech scientists working in digital pharma, predictive analytics, photonics, material science, image processing, plasma physics and many more. Currently it places 6 th in the Russian and CIS TOP-50 (2018) supercomputer list. In this article we summarize the cluster properties and discuss the measured performance and usage modes of this scientific instrument in Skoltech.
This Conceptual Design Report describes LUXE (Laser Und XFEL Experiment), an experimental campaign that aims to combine the high-quality and high-energy electron beam of the European XFEL with a powerful laser to explore the uncharted terrain of quantum electrodynamics characterised by both high energy and high intensity. We will reach this hitherto inaccessible regime of quantum physics by analysing high-energy electron-photon and photon-photon interactions in the extreme environment provided by an intense laser focus. The physics background and its relevance are presented in the science case which in turn leads to, and justifies, the ensuing plan for all aspects of the experiment: Our choice of experimental parameters allows (i) field strengths to be probed where the coupling to charges becomes non-perturbative and (ii) a precision to be achieved that permits a detailed comparison of the measured data with calculations. In addition, the high photon flux predicted will enable a sensitive search for new physics beyond the Standard Model. The initial phase of the experiment will employ an existing 40 TW laser, whereas the second phase will utilise an upgraded laser power of 350 TW. All expectations regarding the performance of the experimental set-up as well as the expected physics results are based on detailed numerical simulations throughout.
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