Picosecond metrology of laser-driven proton bursts

Tracking primary radiation-induced processes in matter requires ultrafast sources and high precision timing. While compact laser-driven ion accelerators are seeding the development of novel high instantaneous flux applications, combining the ultrashort ion and laser pulse durations with their inhere...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2016-02, Vol.7 (1), p.10642-10642, Article 10642
Hauptverfasser: Dromey, B., Coughlan, M., Senje, L., Taylor, M., Kuschel, S., Villagomez-Bernabe, B., Stefanuik, R., Nersisyan, G., Stella, L., Kohanoff, J., Borghesi, M., Currell, F., Riley, D., Jung, D., Wahlström, C.-G., Lewis, C.L.S., Zepf, M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Tracking primary radiation-induced processes in matter requires ultrafast sources and high precision timing. While compact laser-driven ion accelerators are seeding the development of novel high instantaneous flux applications, combining the ultrashort ion and laser pulse durations with their inherent synchronicity to trace the real-time evolution of initial damage events has yet to be realized. Here we report on the absolute measurement of proton bursts as short as 3.5±0.7 ps from laser solid target interactions for this purpose. Our results verify that laser-driven ion acceleration can deliver interaction times over a factor of hundred shorter than those of state-of-the-art accelerators optimized for high instantaneous flux. Furthermore, these observations draw ion interaction physics into the field of ultrafast science, opening the opportunity for quantitative comparison with both numerical modelling and the adjacent fields of ultrafast electron and photon interactions in matter. Experimental investigations of the response of matter to ionization would require extremely fast ion pump pulses. Here, the authors explore a different approach observing ionisation dynamics in SiO 2 glass by generating synchronized proton pulses from the interaction of high-power lasers on a solid target.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms10642