Laser Ion Acceleration: Status and Perspectives for Fusion

High power short-pulse lasers presently reach peak powers of a few hundred Terawatts up to a Petawatt, and routinely reach focal intensities of 1018 - 1021 W/cm2 . These lasers are able to produce various secondary radiation, from relativistic electrons and multi-MeV/nucleon ions to high-energetic X...

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Veröffentlicht in:EPJ Web of conferences 2011-01, Vol.17, p.11001
Hauptverfasser: Thirolf, P.G., Habs, D., Gross, M., Allinger, K., Bin, J., Henig, A., Kiefer, D., Ma, W., Schreiber, J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:High power short-pulse lasers presently reach peak powers of a few hundred Terawatts up to a Petawatt, and routinely reach focal intensities of 1018 - 1021 W/cm2 . These lasers are able to produce various secondary radiation, from relativistic electrons and multi-MeV/nucleon ions to high-energetic X-rays and γ-rays. In many laboratories world-wide large efforts are presently devoted to a rapid development of this novel tool of particle acceleration, targeting nuclear, fundamental and high-field physics studies as well as various applications. Based on the Radiation Pressure Acceleration mechanism, laser-accelerated ion beams can be generated with solid-state density, thus exceeding beams from conventional accelerators by about 14 orders of magnitudes. This opens the perspective of a novel reaction scheme called ’f ssion-fusion’, where in a first step f ssion is induced both in laser-accelerated f ssile projectiles from a ’production target’ and in a second ’reaction target’ again from f ssile material hit by the accelerated projectiles. Due to the unprecedented ion density, (neutron-rich) light f ssion fragments from projectile and target can fuse again, forming extremely exotic species approaching the region of the N = 126 waiting point of the r-process. Within the next 5 years a new EU-funded large-scale research infrastructure (ELI: Extreme Light Infrastructure) will be constructed, with one of its four pillars exclusively devoted to nuclear physics based on high intensity lasers (ELI-Nuclear Physics, to be built in Magurele/Bucharest). Studies of laser-induced nuclear reactions like the ’f ssion-fusion’ mechanism will be amongst the experimental f agship projects pursued there.
ISSN:2100-014X
2100-014X
DOI:10.1051/epjconf/20111711001