| Literature DB >> 29317653 |
M Bailly-Grandvaux1, J J Santos2, C Bellei1, P Forestier-Colleoni1, S Fujioka3, L Giuffrida1, J J Honrubia4, D Batani1, R Bouillaud1, M Chevrot5, J E Cross6, R Crowston7, S Dorard5, J-L Dubois1, M Ehret1,8, G Gregori6, S Hulin1, S Kojima3, E Loyez5, J-R Marquès5, A Morace3, Ph Nicolaï1, M Roth8, S Sakata3, G Schaumann8, F Serres5, J Servel1, V T Tikhonchuk1, N Woolsey7, Z Zhang3.
Abstract
Intense lasers interacting with dense targets accelerate relativistic electron beams, which transport part of the laser energy into the target depth. However, the overall laser-to-target energy coupling efficiency is impaired by the large divergence of the electron beam, intrinsic to the laser-plasma interaction. Here we demonstrate that an efficient guiding of MeV electrons with about 30 MA current in solid matter is obtained by imposing a laser-driven longitudinal magnetostatic field of 600 T. In the magnetized conditions the transported energy density and the peak background electron temperature at the 60-μm-thick target's rear surface rise by about a factor of five, as unfolded from benchmarked simulations. Such an improvement of energy-density flux through dense matter paves the ground for advances in laser-driven intense sources of energetic particles and radiation, driving matter to extreme temperatures, reaching states relevant for planetary or stellar science as yet inaccessible at the laboratory scale and achieving high-gain laser-driven thermonuclear fusion.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29317653 PMCID: PMC5760627 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-02641-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Experimental configuration for relativistic electron beam transport with imposed B-field. a Sketch of the experimental setup at the coil vicinity: the relativistic electron beam (REB) is generated by the intense ps laser, focused parallel to the coil axis and at normal incidence onto the center of the front surface of a neighboring solid 50-μm-CH/10-μm-Cu-thick target of 200-μm diameter. An intense current discharge is previously driven in the Ni coil target (coil radius of 250 μm) by a high-energy ns laser, yielding a dipole-like B-field along the coil axis. REB patterns were investigated by imaging the coherent transition radiation (CTR) emitted from the transport targets’ rear surface. b–e B-field distribution in vacuum (origin of the spatial coordinates at the coil center) at its peak value, 1 ns after ns-laser driving, as experimentally and numerically characterized in ref. [42]. b, d Amplitude of the B-field longitudinal component averaged over the 60 μm target thickness, , at the two explored positions of the transport target (offsets of the target center with respect to the coil center, as labeled). The dashed circles represent the position of the transport target in the perpendicular plane. The coil axis and the intense ps-laser axis are respectively represented by the cross signs and the center of the light-blue circles. The radius of the later corresponds to the REB source radius at the ps-laser-irradiated target surface, r0, in the REB-transport simulations. c, e Absolute value of the B-field vertical component (color scale) and arrow representation of the B-field lines over the target x = 0 -slice, for the two target positions. The plots correspond also to the B-field embedded into the targets as initial conditions for the REB-transport simulations in magnetized conditions, in agreement with predictions of the B-field resistive diffusion. The light-blue regions on the left-hand side of the plots indicate the size of the REB source. Image in a was created by M.B.-G. and J.J.S.
Fig. 2Experimental and synthetic images of the coherent transition radiation. Coherent transition radiation (CTR) is produced at the transport targets’ rear surface when relativistic electrons cross the boundary between the target and vacuum. a–e Experimental data and f–i synthetic CTR calculated from 3D PIC-hybrid simulations of fast electron transport, for the two configurations (i) target out of the coil plane and (ii) target at the coil plane (Fig. 1), with and without imposed B-field. The black horizontal bars, corresponding to 20 μm, give the spatial scale at the emitting target surface. The contour lines correspond to the half-height of the signals. The crossed dashed lines indicate the position of REB injection at the targets’ front laser-irradiated surface. The synthetic images are calculated at the end of the simulation runs and account for all particles having reached the targets’ rear surface
Fig. 3Relativistic electron beam features unfolded from transport simulations. The results, taken at the end of the 3D PIC-hybrid benchmarked simulation runs, are plotted for target-position configurations (i) on the left and (ii) on the right, without and with B-field. a, b Time-integrated relativistic electron beam (REB) energy spectra at the targets’ front side (source, dashed lines) and rear side (full lines, red with imposed B-field, blue without B-field). c–f Time-integrated REB energy-density flux at the targets’ rear surface. g–j Final background electron temperature at the targets’ rear surface. In c–j the black bars stand for the 40 μm spatial scale, the contour lines correspond to the half-height of the signals and the crossed dashed lines indicate the position of REB injection at the targets’ front surface
Fig. 4Relativistic electron beam phase space and transported energy. a, b Relativistic electron beam (REB) transverse phase space (x, p) at the target’s rear surface, a without imposed B-field, b with imposed B-field. c Transported energy as a function of the propagation depth into the target, with (red) and without (blue) imposed B-field: total transported kinetic energy (Wk, diamonds) and its fraction within the initial REB radius r0 centered on the target axis (, stars). All the plots correspond to the transport-target in configuration (ii), positioned at the coil plane
Fig. 5Influence of the imposed B-field strength on the coherent transition radiation. a Synthetic coherent transition radiation (CTR) pattern surface size (at full-width-at-half-maximum) evolution with B-field strength at the coil center, B0 (symbols). Red and blue bands identify the experimental CTR pattern sizes with and without applied B-field. b Ratio of synthetic CTR yield with/without applied B-field evolution with B0 (symbols). The gray band identifies the experimental ratio. The images were analyzed as follows: Experimental images were first subtracted from background noise, which produces the uncertainty on the experimental yield ratio. Synthetic images are convoluted by σ = 3 ± 1 μm s.d. Gaussian functions, matching the spatial resolution of the experimental diagnostic. Error bars on synthetic yield ratios ensue from the considered Δσ = ±1 μm. Both synthetic and experimental surface values are extracted by fitting CTR patterns by bi-dimensional Gaussian functions. Uncertainties on fit parameters arise from the pattern asymmetries