S Depierreux1, V Yahia2, C Goyon1, G Loisel3, P-E Masson-Laborde1, N Borisenko4, A Orekhov4, O Rosmej5, T Rienecker5, C Labaune3. 1. CEA, DAM, DIF, F- 91297 Arpajon, France. 2. 1] CEA, DAM, DIF, F- 91297 Arpajon, France [2] LULI, UMR 7605 CNRS-Ecole Polytechnique-CEA-Université Paris VI, 91128 Palaiseau Cedex, France. 3. LULI, UMR 7605 CNRS-Ecole Polytechnique-CEA-Université Paris VI, 91128 Palaiseau Cedex, France. 4. P. N. Lebedev Physical Institute, 53 Leninskii Prospect, Moscow 119991, Russia. 5. Helmotzzentrum fur Schwerionenforschung GSI, 64291 Darmstadt, Germany.
Abstract
Stimulated Raman backscattering (SRS) has many unwanted effects in megajoule-scale inertially confined fusion (ICF) plasmas. Moreover, attempts to harness SRS to amplify short laser pulses through backward Raman amplification have achieved limited success. In high-temperature fusion plasmas, SRS usually occurs in a kinetic regime where the nonlinear response of the Langmuir wave to the laser drive and its host of complicating factors make it difficult to predict the degree of amplification that can be achieved under given experimental conditions. Here we present experimental evidence of reduced Landau damping with increasing Langmuir wave amplitude and determine its effects on Raman amplification. The threshold for trapping effects to influence the amplification is shown to be very low. Above threshold, the complex SRS dynamics results in increased amplification factors, which partly explains previous ICF experiments. These insights could aid the development of more efficient backward Raman amplification schemes in this regime.
Stimulated Raman backscattering (SRS) has many unwanted effects in megajoule-scale inertially confined fusion (ICF) plasmas. Moreover, attempts to harness SRS to amplify short laser pulses through backward Raman amplification have achieved limited success. In high-temperature fusion plasmas, SRS usually occurs in a kinetic regime where the nonlinear response of the Langmuir wave to the laser drive and its host of complicating factors make it difficult to predict the degree of amplification that can be achieved under given experimental conditions. Here we present experimental evidence of reduced Landau damping with increasing Langmuir wave amplitude and determine its effects on Raman amplification. The threshold for trapping effects to influence the amplification is shown to be very low. Above threshold, the complex SRS dynamics results in increased amplification factors, which partly explains previous ICF experiments. These insights could aid the development of more efficient backward Raman amplification schemes in this regime.
Resonantly excited plasma normal modes have long provided a means to study space
plasmas123. For example, measuring the characteristic frequency of
Langmuir waves gives access to the electron density4. The development of
high-intensity lasers has opened new areas of applications for the excitation of Langmuir
waves in plasma, now widely used to produce high-amplitude accelerating electric field567 or to transfer energy between laser electromagnetic waves891011. The plasma medium is used here because it can sustain very large
electric fields without damage. Although the potential to excite large amplitude electron
plasma waves (EPWs) with lasers is evident, the description of the plasma response is less
obvious and must include nonlinear effects. Additional complications come from currently
higher available plasma temperature, which results in a significant amount of electrons
approaching the phase velocity of the Langmuir wave. Then, the fluid approach no longer
applies and the EPW will experience collisionless Landau damping12 for which
an exact mathematical treatment exists only for infinitesimal amplitude plasma waves13. As the EPW amplitude increases, trapping of the electrons in its potential
well significantly modifies the electron distribution function in the neighbourhood of the
EPW phase velocity, causing a reduction of the Landau damping rate compared with its linear
value. This reduction has been measured in low-temperature plasmas (<10 eV)1415.Because of its inherent complexity, nonlinear Landau damping is still the subject of
theoretical and numerical studies1617181920 more than 50 years after
the Landau’s initial calculation. For laser-driven Langmuir waves, the consequences
of trapping are even more complicated because additional opposite effects can
simultaneously occur. The trapping-induced modification of the distribution function also
produces a nonlinear shift of the frequency2122 of the EPW that can detune
the resonance and finally reduce the coupling of the EPW with its laser drive. Additional
two- and three-dimensional trapped particle instabilities may also limit the EPW amplitude
in this case2324. These nonlinear trapping effects affecting a driven EPW
in high-temperature plasmas have been studied theoretically and numerically25262728293031323334, but some critical trapping features
remain difficult to track with simulations representative of experimental conditions.Here we present direct measurements of the nonlinear behaviour of driven Langmuir waves in
high-temperature plasmas and of its impact on the Raman amplification factor. The
experiment uses laser beams in a three steps procedure: (i) a broadband electromagnetic
wave is first generated by the resonant interaction of the incident laser with a target,
(ii) an EPW is produced by optical mixing of this counterpropagating wave with the incident
laser in a preformed plasma and (iii) the evolution of the driven EPW is deduced from the
Raman amplification factor of this plasma. Trapping nonlinearities are evidenced in the
driven EPW response by comparing the stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) of the plasma with
and without the seed. The threshold intensity of the counterpropagating seed beam above
which trapping nonlinearities develop is directly measured in the experiment and found to
be lower than 1012 W cm−2. Above
threshold, we demonstrate a sharp increase in the Raman amplification factor at scattered
light wavelengths for which linear Landau damping was dominant. This allows us to identify
a laser and plasma parameter region for which kinetic nonlinearities in the Langmuir waves
result in increased Raman amplification. The plasma parameters are relevant to previously
reported backward Raman amplifier (BRA)3536 and inertial confinement
fusion (ICF) experiments373839. The level of seed intensity that
triggers nonlinearities in the plasma wave response corresponds to low levels of SRS
reflectivities inside ICF targets and is close to the seed intensity available in BRA
experiments.
Results
Experimental setup
The seeded experiment uses a compound target (see Fig. 1a) made
up of an underdense foam followed by a 2-μm-thick CH foil. In the compound
target, the CH foil generates a backscattered SRS signal propagating backward in the
foam plasma, where it beats with the incident laser electromagnetic wave to drive an
EPW. This initial situation is shown in Fig. 1b. Backscattering
measured from the compound target provides information about the amplification of the
foil SRS signal in the foam plasma (see Fig. 1c). The foam and
foil responses are also studied individually for comparison: (i) the seed signal is
measured with shots performed with the foil alone and (ii) shots with the foam alone
give the SRS contribution of the foam when starting from thermal noise. The latter
provides the intrinsic amplification of the foam plasma resulting from its
hydrodynamic expansion as a function of time.
Figure 1
The compound target configuration.
(a) Sketch of the experimental setup: the heating beam first ionizes and
heats the foam before the interaction beam starts; (b) the incident
interaction laser beam (of intensity I0 and frequency
ω0) and the SRS light backscattered by the foil (of
intensity ISRS,foil and frequency ωSRS)
couple via the ponderomotive force to drive an EPW in the foam plasma (of
frequency
ωEPW=ω0−ωSRS)
whose amplitude is controlled by the product I0 ×
ISRS,foil; (c) the SRS from the foil is amplified as
it propagates through the foam allowing the measurement of the amplification
factor of the foam.
The experiment uses two consecutive beams of 1.5 ns duration and 400 J
energy at 526.5 nm. The first beam is used to ionize and heat the low-density
TAC (C12H16O8) foam40, producing a
fully ionized plasma by the end of the heater pulse41. The foams used
in this experiment have a 6 or 3 mg cc−1 density
and are 300 μm long. At t=1.5 ns, they are heated up to
(0.8±0.2) keV electron temperature as deduced from the intensity ratio of
H-like and He-like lines observed in the spectrally resolved X-ray emission of a
chlorine dopant added at the 1% level for diagnostic purposes. The interaction is
studied on the second beam. Experimental details on the beams and diagnostics
configuration are given in the Methods section.
Experimental results in the foam-alone target
As an initial step, we first characterize the SRS backscattered from a
6 mg cc−1 foam plasma when it starts from
thermal EPW levels. The time-resolved SRS spectrum measured for a preformed foam
plasma is shown in Fig. 2a. The maximum electronic density is
close to 0.45 nc when the foam is fully ionized at the end of the
plasma-producing beam. The plasma then expands and the maximum density decreases.
Monitoring of the half harmonic emission characteristic of two-plasmon decay
instability confirms that quarter critical density (nc/4) is still
present in the plasma when the interaction beam starts. SRS starts after
t=1.8 ns, when the maximum density is already below
nc/4. The maximum scattered light wavelength, which is directly
connected to the maximum plasma density in which SRS develops, decreases as a
function of time starting from 800 nm (or
ne/nc=0.11 for 0.8 keV) at
t=1.8 ns. In the period t=2.3 ns to
t=2.6 ns, the maximum plasma density in which SRS develops decreases
from 0.11 nc at t=2.3 ns to 0.08 nc
at t=2.6 ns. A short wavelength cutoff is observed in the SRS spectrum
below 720 nm in the range where the Landau damping rate, shown in Fig. 3a, sharply increases424344. The spectrum
is shown for different times during the interaction in Fig. 3b.
This illustrates how the SRS growth of the foam plasma shifts as a function of time
towards shorter wavelengths following its hydrodynamic expansion. The amplitude of
the SRS signal also decreases simultaneously. Between its maximum at
t=2.35 ns and t=2.7 ns, it drops by a factor 8 due to the
density decrease that moves the amplification in a region of lower SRS gain. The
temporal evolution of the transmission of the interaction beam through the foam
plasma is measured in the same conditions. It starts at the beginning of the pulse,
thereby validating that the foam is fully ionized at the end of the plasma heating
beam. It displays an almost constant transmitted power for the full duration of the
interaction beam with an average transmission of 35%. No break up of the transmitted
beam is observed in the two-dimensional far-field images recorded with the
charge-coupled device camera.
The SRS spectra are shown on a logarithmic scale for (a) a
6-mg cc−1, 300-μm foam plasma, (b) a
2-μm-thick CH foil and (c) the combination of the two. The SRS
spectrum measured with the compound target (c) where SRS in the foam is
seeded by the SRS light backscattered by the foil extends further in the short
wavelengths range compared with the two other spectra (a,b). A new
component is observed around t=2.7 ns and
λSRS=720 nm. Dot-dashed lines have been drawn on
the three spectra to indicate these particular time and wavelength.
Figure 3
Landau cutoff in the SRS spectrum of the foam plasma.
(a) The damping rates of the driven EPWs are shown as a function of the SRS
scattered light wavelength. Collisional (νc) and Landau
(νL) damping rates are calculated for a Maxwellian
distribution function for electron temperatures of 0.7 and 0.8 keV. In the
transition region where collisional and Landau damping are almost equal, at
750 nm, we calculate kλDe=0.23 for the driven EPW.
(b) Spectrum of the SRS signal measured for the
6-mg cc−1, 300-μm foam-alone plasma for
different times during the interaction.
Experimental results in the foil alone target
Following these observations, the interaction with the foil is studied with shots
performed with the interaction beam alone fired at a reduced energy level to
reproduce the laser intensity measured in the transmission of the foam alone. This is
used to characterize the Raman light that comes back into the foam plasma of the
compound target. The corresponding time-resolved spectrum is shown in Fig. 2b. It covers a broad spectral range extending from 720 to
830 nm. The SRS level in the foil-alone shots increases as a function of time
following the foil–plasma expansion that provides longer density scalelengths
more favourable to SRS growth. The electromagnetic seed level increases as a function
of time on a hydrodynamics timescale. This will be used to study the amplifier
response for increasing initial EPW amplitude, as it follows the slow increase of the
seed intensity. The time history of the SRS reflectivities measured in single targets
is summarized in Fig. 4a. In the time interval
t=2.4–2.8 ns, SRS from the foam decreases and SRS from the foil
increases.
Figure 4
Stimulated Raman scattering signals as a function of time.
(a) SRS signal for the three types of targets; the error bars shown for the
compound target measurement illustrate the shot to shot variation; the maximum SRS
reflectivity measured in the compound target is 11%. (b) SRS signal
measured in the compound target compared with the sum of the foam-alone and
foil-alone signals, and exceeding contribution observed with the compound
target.
Experimental results in the compound target
Shots are then performed with targets where the foam is followed by the foil. The
distance between the two components of the target is chosen to be 1.2 mm to
eliminate hydrodynamic coupling between the two plasmas. The temporal evolution of
the SRS signals measured in the compound targets is shown in Fig.
4a in comparison with the foil and foam-alone signals. Early in the pulse,
the foil contribution is negligible and the SRS reflectivity in the compound target
follows the one measured for the foam alone. At the end of the pulse, the foam
contribution is very low and we recover the foil-alone contribution. At intermediate
times (t=2.4 ns to t=2.8 ns), the compound target signal
significantly exceeds the sum of the foam and foil signals as can be seen in Fig. 4b.Additional essential insight comes from the time-resolved SRS spectrum, in Fig. 2c, measured with the compound target: a new contribution at
short wavelengths clearly appears in the time-resolved spectrum. This new component
occurs at times t≥2.4 ns and extends from 700 to 740 nm,
a wavelength range where Landau damping of the EPW dominates over collisional damping
(Fig. 3a). This is also a wavelength region where the SRS
from either the foam or the foil alone is very weak. The additional contribution
previously evidenced in the spectrally integrated data mainly results from this new
spectral component. This is clear when comparing the time evolution of the SRS
signals measured at 720 and 770 nm for the three types of targets in Fig. 5a,b.
Figure 5
Time evolution of the SRS signals at 720 and 770 nm.
The SRS signals are shown for the three types of targets in the regions dominated
by either (a) Landau damping in the range 720±10 nm or
(b) collisional damping in the range 770±10 nm.
Additional shots, performed with 3 mg cc−1,
300-μm-long foams, lead to the same conclusions than for the
6 mg cc−1 foams. In the SRS signal of the
3 mg cc−1 foam-alone plasma, a cutoff is
observed at 720 nm due to Landau damping. A new spectral component extending
from 700 to 750 nm clearly appears in the spectrum of the compound target when
the amplitude of the 2 μm CH SRS backscattering signal has reached a
sufficient level.
Results analysis
The additional contribution observed in the
6 mg cc−1 foam in the period
t=2.4 ns to t=2.8 ns in the shots with the compound
target is interpreted as the reamplification of the foil signal as it propagates
through the foam plasma, with a reamplification factor defined as
(SRScompound−SRSfoil−SRSfoam)/SRSfoil.
It is extracted from the data for different wavelength ranges and plotted as a
function of time in Fig. 6a. At 770 nm, the
reamplification starts at t=2.3 ns, stabilizes at (11±1) for
150 ps and then decreases. At 720 nm, the reamplification starts at
t=2.4 ns and first stabilizes at a slightly lower value of 6. For
t>2.58 ns, we observe a sharp increase in the reamplification at
720 nm that rapidly exceeds the one observed earlier at any wavelength: in
<200 ps, the reamplification at 720 nm rises from 6 to 16. The
reamplification observed for t<2.58 ns is in agreement with
convective amplification of the seed signal in the foam plasma, with an associated
small gain (~2–3) that decreases for shorter scattered light
wavelengths due to the increased EPW damping rate in this wavelength range (see Fig. 3a). Such convective amplification of the small foil seed
signal in the foam plasma results in the continuation of the foam SRS activity for
longer time in the compound target. The change in reamplification observed at
t~2.6 ns at 720 nm occurs when the linear
amplification of unseeded SRS from the foam plasma is decreasing for all wavelengths,
including short ones (see Fig. 3b). The sudden change in the
nonlinear reamplification of the large seed would not be expected if the growth rate
remained the linear one that evolved in time due to hydrodynamic evolution of the
foam plasma. Further, the nonlinear change is seen to occur only in the wavelength
range where Landau damping dominates over collisional damping, which is a signature
of the nonlinear Langmuir wave response resulting from trapping effects. On the
timescale of this experiment, ion wave nonlinearities could also affect the EPW
evolution. The effect of coupling with the ion acoustic wave dynamics would be to
saturate the amplitude of the Langmuir waves as they loose part of their energy in
the secondary Langmuir decay instability (LDI). LDI is the decay of an EPW into a
counterpropagating EPW and an ion acoustic wave454647. Past
Thomson scattering measurements performed in the transition region between fluid and
kinetic nonlinearities that we explore here have shown significant LDI only in the
fluid regime48. Thereby, in our experiment the only possible effect of
LDI of the driven EPW could be to limit the SRS amplification factor measured at
770 nm.
Figure 6
Transition to the nonlinear regime and threshold.
(a) Reamplification as defined in the main text calculated over a
wavelength range of 20 nm around 770 and 720 nm as a function of
time. The transition in the region dominated by Landau damping (720 nm) is
observed at t=2.58 ns, (b) time history of the foil SRS
reflected intensity measured at 720 and 770 nm. At t=2.58 ns,
the wave scattered at 720 nm reaches an intensity of
ISRS,foil≈5 ×
1011 W cm−2.
Our experiment has been specially designed to investigate the nonlinear response of
driven EPWs with a setup allowing the direct measurement of the threshold for
trapping effects to influence the SRS amplification. Measurements have been performed
below and above the threshold for nonlinear effects in the kinetic regime and
compared with similar measurements performed in the fluid regime. This way of
proceeding allows us to clearly identify the nonlinear behaviour of EPWs in the
kinetic regime as responsible for the change in the SRS behaviour at short
wavelength. Our experiment demonstrates an enhanced SRS amplification compared with
convective amplification in this regime in relevant experimental situations with
controlled conditions. The associated effects can be observed as soon as the foil
contribution in the corresponding wavelength range has reached a threshold level of
~5 × 1011 W cm−2 as
can be seen in Fig. 6b. This threshold is set by the
competition between trapping-induced modifications of the electron distribution
function and relaxation mechanisms that tend to restore a Maxwellian distribution
such as collisions and escape from the speckles.
Discussion
These observations can be discussed in the context of ICF experiments. The target
geometry used for the present experiment reproduces the geometry of multiple plasmas
inside a hohlraum along a laser beam path: the underdense foam mimics the hohlraum gas
and the CH foil, the ablator or hohlraum wall. The reflected foil intensity above which
nonlinear effects in the Langmuir wave behaviour are observed corresponds to a small SRS
reflectivity of 0.1% at 720 nm. Our results indicate that a very small level of
reflectivity produced deep inside the cavity may significantly modify the conditions for
the amplification of the backscattered SRS light on its path towards the laser entrance
hole. The plasma combination results in a significant SRS contribution in the
short-wavelength range. As the origin of this effect is in the kinetic nonlinearities of
the Langmuir wave, this result would not be expected from standard linear gain
calculations. In the geometry of ICF hohlraum targets, a similar situation may occur
when light is backscattered from the wall or ablator plasma and then propagates through
the gas plasma before exiting the cavity37383949. Experimental SRS
spectra reported for National Ignition Facility experiments at the megajoule level
include contributions at short scattered light wavelengths that sometimes exceed the
contributions at longer wavelengths. Although the global shape of the spectra is rather
well reproduced by linear gain calculations39, a striking feature is that
the ratio between the short-wavelength early time and long-wavelength late time
contributions is clearly underestimated: the level of SRS gain at short wavelengths
(λSRS<540 nm) is not reproduced by the
simulations39 despite improvements in the radiative hydrodynamics
simulations that generate the plasma conditions. Linear reamplification of the light
backscattered in the target interior by multiple crossing beams in the region of the
laser entrance hole has been used to explain the enhanced contribution at short
scattered light wavelengths3738. Our experiment, performed in a simpler
geometry, clearly demonstrates an additional effect that enhances the shortest
wavelength range contribution. Our interpretation involves nonlinearities in the plasma
wave response so that the final SRS signal not only results from the reamplification of
a seed but also from an increased SRS gain modified by kinetics effects that should also
be included in the simulations to reproduce the experimental results.The threshold intensity of the counterpropagating wave above which this effect should be
considered in the simulations is deduced solely from the experiment. It can be compared
with theoretical estimates developed by Strozzi et al.50 Their
model considers three-dimensional detrapping effects as well as collisions. It compares
the time needed before trapped electrons can significantly affect the electron
distribution function with the detrapping time. Depending on the conditions, this is
fixed by the collisional relaxation of the distribution function or by the time taken by
the electrons to escape the interaction region, whose dimensions are fixed by the
focusing optics. The amplitude of the EPW produced by the ponderomotive force of the two
counterpropagating electromagnetic waves locally grows like δn/n=1/4 ×
v1 × v2 ×
kEPW2/ωpt (refs
51, 52) where
v1 and v2 are the maximum oscillating velocities
in the electric fields of the incident laser and of the light backscattered by the foil
plasma, kEPW is the wave–vector module of the driven EPW and
ωp is the plasma frequency. For our conditions, using the
average incident laser intensity and the average threshold intensity of
ISRS,foil≈5 ×
1011 W cm−2, we calculate from the
expression of δn/n that the time needed for trapping to distort the
electron distribution function significantly is
τtrap~0.2 ps. At this time, the EPW has reached an
amplitude of δn/n=7 × 10−3. In the meantime, the
trapped electrons would escape the speckle on longer characteristic times
~0.3 ps. This indicates that our experimental threshold corresponds to the
limit where trapping effects start influencing the EPW evolution according to ref.
50. As τtrap decreases slowly
for increasing intensity, considering speckles with higher intensity in the incident
laser or backscattered light will not significantly affect this conclusion: below
threshold for the more intense speckles, no evidence of trapping is seen in the
experiment, and as soon as the most intense speckles exceed the threshold the lowest
intensity ones will also exceed it for a seed intensity just 1.5 times higher. As a
consequence, the intensity variations in the random phase plate (RPP) focal spot do not
affect our conclusion. Our experimental results thus validate the theoretical estimates
presented in ref. 50. They also demonstrate that close to
threshold, the reduction in Landau damping dominates over frequency detuning and other
trapped particle instabilities so that the SRS amplification factor increases compared
with the convective one. The key parameters that settle the impact of kinetic
nonlinearities of the driven Langmuir waves on the SRS amplification factor in the
regime initially dominated by Landau damping are the electron temperature and the
speckle size that both determine the characteristic time for side loss, which must be
compared with τtrap. For the experiments on the National
Ignition Facility, where large levels of stimulated Raman scattering were measured, we
calculate that detrapping through side loss is effective in 0.15 ps, which is a
situation very close to our experiment.Our experiment is performed in the nanosecond regime but its counterpropagating geometry
is similar to the one used for the amplification of short pulses in BRA schemes. There,
the two electromagnetic waves correspond to the long pump and short seed pulses. Our
experiment demonstrates that low seed levels are sufficient to trigger trapping-induced
nonlinearities. The nonlinear effects observed in our experiment develop on times that
shorten as the intensity of the seed increases33: as soon as the seed
intensity exceeds 1016 W cm−2, we
calculate τtrap<50 fs. As a result, initial strong
linear Landau damping rates could be reduced by trapping effects over the duration of
the seed pulse, allowing the BRA scheme to operate in this regime of strong linear
Landau damping53. However, our observations of increasing amplification
with seed intensity were not obtained in experiments373854 when the
seed intensity was scanned in the range we explored. Although trapping effects develop
in ~0.3 ps, the low electron temperature of the plasma and the laser
parameters result in longer times (~1.7 ps) for trapped particle to escape
the speckle. Experiments with shorter-wavelength laser in higher-temperature plasmas may
reach a regime similar to ours for the amplification of picosecond pulses. In these
experiments, the shifted seed pulse may be directly generated in the targets similar to
that in our experimental setup. Although BRA uses SRS in plasmas for the amplification
of short pulses, the initial seed beam energy remains limited by the use of Raman
crystals or gas cells. Our experiment suggests that the seed pulse may be produced by
direct interaction of the unshifted short-pulse laser in a plasma (see Methods for
details).Our experimental demonstration that trapping nonlinearities develop for small levels of
ponderomotive drive may explain some of the past experiments that reported increased
stimulated Raman scattering reflectivities compared with those expected from linear gain
calculations46. Our observations are of prime interest to the ICF
community as they contribute to explain the large level of stimulated Raman
backscattering measured in experiments at the megajoule level. The experiment was
designed to provide an experimental answer in a transition region where trapping
nonlinearities are close to threshold, and where collisional and Landau damping rates
are of the same order. Although relevant to experiments performed in the context of BRA
and ICF (see the Methods section), these conditions are among the most complicated to
describe with numerical simulations. As a consequence, our measurement of the nonlinear
response of a driven plasma wave in this regime is likely to guide future theoretical
and numerical studies.
Methods
Laser beams and diagnostics configuration
The experiment is performed with the two kJ beams of the LULI 2000 laser facility at
Ecole Polytechnique, both converted to the second harmonic
(λlaser=526.5 nm) with a 50% conversion efficiency.
The pulse has a duration of 1.5 ns for each beam with a time delay between the
two beams of 1.5 ns. The first beam is used as a heating beam to ionize the
foam target. It is smoothed with a RPP with 4-mm square elements and focused by a
1.6-m, f/8 focal lens with a resulting average intensity on target equal to 3 ×
1014 W cm−2 in the 250-μm
focal spot. The second beam then interacts with the preformed foam plasma followed in
some cases by the foil. It is smoothed with an RPP with 5 mm square elements
and focused by a 1.6-m, f/8 focal lens with a resulting average intensity on target
of 5 × 1014 W cm−2 in the
200-μm focal spot. Two optical stations are set up on this interaction beam to
analyse both the transmitted and reflected lights. The transmission is collected by
an f/4 lens and imaged onto a charge-coupled device, a streak camera and a fast
photodiode. The backscattered SRS light is collected from the reflection on an
uncoated plate inserted on the incident interaction beam. It is analysed by the
combination of a spectrometer and a streak camera in the Raman
(λ∈[λlaser;
2λlaser ]) wavelength range with a spectral resolution of
20 nm and a temporal resolution of 200 ps. The time-integrated Raman
backscattered energy is measured with a fast photodiode. Shots were performed with
either the foam or the foil alone, and with the contribution of the two. The
comparison of the Raman scattering levels for three conditions is used to measure the
reamplification factor, as defined in the text, of the foil signal in the foam
plasma.
Generation of the shifted seeding electromagnetic wave in a plasma
The counterpropagating electromagnetic seed is produced by direct interaction of the
interaction beam with a 2-μm-thick CH foil. The latter has been chosen because
for the interaction beam parameters (λlaser=526.5 nm
and I0=5 ×
1014 W cm−2), it is fully
ablated in ~0.5 ns. SRS of the interaction beam in the expanding foil
plasma is an efficient way to generate the shifted electromagnetic wave. The spectral
intensity of the SRS signal from the foil plasma is shown in Fig.
7a. The laser intensity is converted with a maximum conversion efficiency
of 5% in a wave shifted to 760 nm covering a narrow bandwidth of
<100 nm. This represents better performances than Raman gas cells, which
produce a shifted energy distributed over a wider spectrum (~300 nm).
If calculated as a rate of conversion per unit of wavelength, Raman scattering in a
plasma is as efficient as Raman crystals, except that this new technique can handle
higher energy pulses: the shifted signal is produced in a diameter equivalent to the
incident laser beam whose intensity can be up to a few
1015 W cm−2 without significant
broadening of the SRS spectrum. For completeness, the performances of this new scheme
have been tested in the picosecond regime: it was found that equivalent performances
can be reached with a 5-ps pulse interacting with a foil preformed plasma.
Figure 7
Characteristics of the electromagnetic seed and amplifier plasma.
(a) The spectral intensity of the foil SRS signal is shown at
t=2.6 ns. With integration over a 500-μm spot size and a 5-ps
duration, it peaks at 0.59 mJ nm−1, which
represents better performances than reached in Raman gas cells54,
(b) The kλDe=0.23 and
kλDe=0.3 curves are plotted in the
(ne, Te) plane. The parameters values for
which νc equals νL in a Maxwellian
plasma are also shown for Te=2 keV for 351 nm
laser wavelength, for Te=0.8 keV at 526 nm and for
Te=50 eV at 800 nm. The experiments shown in
this graph are those of ref. 35 close to
50 eV, of ref. 54 close to 200 eV and
the one described in this paper close to 0.8 keV.
The foam plasma amplifier
The main foams chosen for this study were
6 mg cc−1, 300 μm long. The
ionization of these foams was diagnosed through time-resolved measurements of the
transmission and through transverse imaging of the ionization front. Both
measurements are consistent and give an average velocity of 2 ×
107 cm s−1 validating that the
ionization is supersonic for these foam parameters. When fully ionized at
t=1.5 ns, the 6 mg cc−1 density
results in a 0.45 nc electronic density. SRS of the interaction
beam provides the amplification of this plasma when starting from noise and indicates
that the foam plasma response extends into the range of interest
(720–770 nm) for times >2.4 ns when the foil SRS signal has
reached a sufficient level. With this choice of foam plasma amplifier, the transition
region between the two regimes, respectively, dominated by collisional and Landau
damping could be investigated. In our experiment, the transition region corresponds
to kλDe~0.23. Owing to the sharp increase in the
Landau damping rate with kλDe in this region, it equals the
collisional damping rate close to kλDe~0.23–0.3
over a wide range of density and temperature. This is shown in Fig.
7b which illustrates that the transition region described in ref. 55 and studied in this experiment is a general feature of
numerous BRA and ICF experiments.
Author contributions
The experiment was performed by S.D., V.Y., C.G., G.L., C.L., O.R. and T.R. A.O. and
N.B. prepared the foam targets. V.Y., C.G. and G.L. designed and operated the
transmission and backscattering diagnostics. O.R. and T.R. designed and operated the
X-ray diagnostics used for plasma characterization. S.D. and V.Y. carried out the data
analysis. S.D. interpreted the results. The interpretation was discussed with C.L. and
P.-E.M.-L. S.D. and C.L. wrote the paper.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Depierreux, S. et al. Laser light triggers
increased Raman amplification in the regime of nonlinear Landau damping. Nat.
Commun. 5:4158 doi: 10.1038/ncomms5158 (2014).
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