| Literature DB >> 29548124 |
Eduardo Oliva1,2, Adrien Depresseux3, Manuel Cotelo1,2, Agustín Lifschitz3, Fabien Tissandier3, Julien Gautier3, Gilles Maynard4, Pedro Velarde1,2, Stéphane Sebban3.
Abstract
High-density, collisionally pumped plasma-based soft-x-ray lasers have recently delivered hundreds of femtosecond pulses, breaking the longstanding barrier of one picosecond. To pump these amplifiers an intense infrared pulse must propagate focused throughout all the length of the amplifier, which spans several Rayleigh lengths. However, strong nonlinear effects hinder the propagation of the laser beam. The use of a plasma waveguide allows us to overcome these drawbacks provided the hydrodynamic processes that dominate the creation and posterior evolution of the waveguide are controlled and optimized. In this paper we present experimental measurements of the radial density profile and transmittance of such waveguide, and we compare them with numerical calculations using hydrodynamic and particle-in-cell codes. Controlling the properties (electron density value and radial gradient) of the waveguide with the help of numerical codes promises the delivery of ultrashort (tens of femtoseconds), coherent soft-x-ray pulses.Year: 2018 PMID: 29548124 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.97.023203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev E ISSN: 2470-0045 Impact factor: 2.529