| Literature DB >> 31118430 |
Daniel Haffa1, Jianhui Bin2,3, Martin Speicher4, Klaus Allinger5, Jens Hartmann5, Christian Kreuzer5, Enrico Ridente5,6, Tobias M Ostermayr5,6,7, Jörg Schreiber5.
Abstract
Today's high-power laser systems are capable of reaching photon intensities up to 1022 W cm-2, generating plasmas when interacting with material. The high intensity and ultrashort laser pulse duration (fs) make direct observation of plasma dynamics a challenging task. In the field of laser-plasma physics and especially for the acceleration of ions, the spatio-temporal intensity distribution is one of the most critical aspects. We describe a novel method based on a single-shot (i.e. single laser pulse) chirped probing scheme, taking nine sequential frames at frame rates up to THz. This technique, to which we refer as temporally resolved intensity contouring (TRIC) enables single-shot measurement of laser-plasma dynamics. Using TRIC, we demonstrate the reconstruction of the complete spatio-temporal intensity distribution of a high-power laser pulse in the focal plane at full pulse energy with sub-picosecond resolution.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31118430 PMCID: PMC6531490 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-42683-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Experimental Setup for TRIC. A Ti:Sapphire laser pulse (1) is focused onto a 200 nm thick Formvar target (2) at 45° incidence. A small part of the short laser pulse is coupled out earlier (3) and sent through a glass rod (4). The emerging chirped pulse (5) passes the target perpendicular to the main pulse. In the imaging path, the probe beam is multiplied using a low dispersion transmission grating (6). A small frequency range is cut out of each of the replicas by narrow bandpass filters (7) before being recorded with a camera (8). The bottom row shows a sample picture series recorded in a single-shot.
Figure 2Nexus of intensity distribution and plasma shape. This figure shows separately obtained images of the laser focus, the probe image and the hole in the target after the shot. The configuration can be seen in (a), a 20 times magnifying microscope views the target under an angle of 45° and also measures an attenuated pulse in the focal plane (b) (contour image). The hole in the target with intensity I5 is shown in (c). A shot with intensity I4 compares the hole in the target (e) to the probe image (d). The table (f) lists the laser energies on target and corresponding intensities used during the experiment.
Figure 3Spatio-temporal intensity distribution. (a) shows the scaled edge contours exceeding a certain intensity . Each row corresponds to a single shot with a certain laser intensity (attenuation coefficient) of the laser pulse and thus a different intensity of the scaled edge contour line. While the edges exactly have the depicted intensity, the inner part of the enclosed contour cannot be specified. The table shows the used peak laser intensities and the corresponding measured scaled edge contour intensity. The yellow frame shows the spatial distribution at the peak of the laser pulse t = 189 fs (first frame after t = 0) and the red line the temporal intensity distribution of x = 0 µm and y = 15 µm. (b) is the absolute spatio-temporal intensity map and is the main result. Each time step represents the summation over a column in (a).
Figure 4Comparison of TRIC to contrast curve and HDR focus image. (a) Compares the intensity distribution measured with TRIC and with a HDR camera. Line-outs of the HDR focus (left inset) and the TRIC focus (right inset) are shown. (b) Shows the temporal contrast of TRIC at x = 0 µm and y = 15 µm. For comparison the right axis shows a normalization compared to the measurement taken with the Sequoia-autocorrelator.