Order-of-magnitude increase in laser-target coupling at near-relativistic intensities using compound parabolic concentrators

Achieving a high conversion efficiency into relativistic electrons is central to short-pulse laser application and fundamentally relies on creating interaction regions with intensities >> 10(18) W/cm(2). Small focal length optics are typically employed to achieve this goal; however, this solut...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical review. E 2021-03, Vol.103 (3), p.L031201-L031201, Article 031201
Hauptverfasser: Williams, G. J., Link, A., Sherlock, M., Alessi, D. A., Bowers, M., Golick, B. P., Hamamoto, M., Hermann, M. R., Kalantar, D., LaFortune, K. N., Mackinnon, A. J., MacPhee, A., Manuel, M. J-E, Martinez, D., Mauldin, M., Pelz, L., Prantil, M., Quinn, M., Remington, B., Sigurdsson, R., Wegner, P., Youngblood, K., Chen, Hui
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Achieving a high conversion efficiency into relativistic electrons is central to short-pulse laser application and fundamentally relies on creating interaction regions with intensities >> 10(18) W/cm(2). Small focal length optics are typically employed to achieve this goal; however, this solution is impractical for large kJ-class systems that are constrained by facility geometry, debris concerns, and component costs. We fielded target-mounted compound parabolic concentrators to overcome these limitations and achieved nearly an order-of-magnitude increase to the conversion efficiency and more than tripled electron temperature compared to flat targets. Particle-in-cell simulations demonstrate that plasma confinement within the cone and formation of turbulent laser fields that develop from cone wall reflections are responsible for the improved laser-to-target coupling. These passive target components can be used to improve the coupling efficiency for all high-intensity short-pulse laser applications, particularly at large facilities with long focal length optics.
ISSN:2470-0045
2470-0053
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevE.103.L031201