| Literature DB >> 26568520 |
James D Sadler1, Ricky Nathvani1, Piotr Oleśkiewicz1, Luke A Ceurvorst1, Naren Ratan1, Muhammad F Kasim1, Raoul M G M Trines2, Robert Bingham2,3, Peter A Norreys1,2.
Abstract
State of the art X-ray Free Electron Laser facilities currently provide the brightest X-ray pulses available, typically with mJ energy and several hundred femtosecond duration. Here we present one- and two-dimensional Particle-in-Cell simulations, utilising the process of stimulated Raman amplification, showing that these pulses are compressed to a temporally coherent, sub-femtosecond pulse at 8% efficiency. Pulses of this type may pave the way for routine time resolution of electrons in nm size potentials. Furthermore, evidence is presented that significant Landau damping and wave-breaking may be beneficial in distorting the rear of the interaction and further reducing the final pulse duration.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26568520 PMCID: PMC4645159 DOI: 10.1038/srep16755
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1A schematic of the simulated set-up.
A pump pulse of wavelength greater than 1 nm is focussed to highest possible peak intensity (>1018 W/cm2) on a target around 1/10 of solid density. A 2 fs seed pulse at slightly longer wavelength counter-propagates with a sufficiently small angular offset, such that the pulses interact for tens of microns. Under the conditions described, material absorption is low, whereas the plasma wave interaction depletes around 10% of the pump energy, with a portion of this scattered into the seed pulse as shown in Table 1. The interaction further reduces the seed duration to 500 as or less. The optimal pump pulse length is twice the width of the target, with linear polarisation for both pulses.
Results for 1D PIC simulations with a pump wavelength of 10 nm and fixed duration 250 fs.
| Pump Intensity (×1018 W/cm2) | Electron Density (×1022/cm3) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3.4 | 5.7 | 7.7 | 11 | ||
| 1.4 | Duration (as) | 1400 | 1280 | ||
| Energy (mJ) | 0.04 | 0.06 | |||
| Efficiency | 1.1% | 1.7% | |||
| 5.5 | Duration (as) | 370 | 400 | 480 | |
| Energy (mJ) | 1.1 | 0.4 | 1.0 | ||
| Efficiency | 8.0% | 3.5% | 7.0% | ||
| 12.3 | Duration (as) | 330 | 290 | 260 | |
| Energy (mJ) | 0.7 | 1.2 | 1.1 | ||
| Efficiency | 2.4% | 3.8% | 3.7% | ||
For each simulation, the following output pulse parameters are given: Full width at half maximum duration (as), energy content assuming 1 μm spot size (mJ) and energy transfer efficiency from the pump pulse.
Figure 2Three time-steps from a two-dimensional (2D) Particle-in-Cell simulation.
The X-ray seed intensity increases as it propagates to the right, through the pump pulse (almost invisible on this scale) in the opposite direction. Time steps are after 16%, 70% and 100% of the 40 μm interaction distance, containing a plasma with electron density 5.7 × 1022/cm3. The pump is 250 fs long, 10 nm wavelength and has constant intensity 1.2 × 1019 W/cm2. The initial seed is Gaussian transform limited with duration 1.5 fs and intensity equal to that of the pump. The emerging radiation has been compressed to 300 as and received 3% of the pump energy. There were 120 cells per pump wavelength, each with a width of 2 nm, initialised with 50 electrons and 5 ions per cell. Boundary conditions were free space. Distance between successive time steps is not to scale.
Figure 3Electron phase space diagram for a 1D PIC simulation after 15% of the interaction distance.
The FWHM of the seed pulse is enclosed by the solid black lines. The initial Maxwellian distribution is excited to a Langmuir wave which subsequently breaks within the extent of the seed pulse.