Guiding of an intense, ultrashort laser pulse in a discharge-produced capillary plasma for electronacceleration application
POSTER
Abstract
Guiding of an intense laser pulse is supported today's advanced technology such as laser wakefield acceleration, x-ray lasers, high-order-harmonic generation, and inverse Compton scattering. The laser-matter interaction length of a focused laser pulse is fundamentally limited by diffraction to the order of the Rayleigh length, and is further restricted by ionization-induced refraction. We developed a plasma waveguide for propagating intense laser pulse by use of a capillary discharge plasma. The alumina capillary had a diameter of 300 $\mu$m and a length of 10 mm. For present work, the discharge peak voltage and current were 30 kV and 500 A with a pulse width of 100 ns (FWHM), respectively. The guiding experiments used the laser pulse of the central wavelength of 800 nm from a CPA Ti:sapphire laser with a pulse width of 130 fs (FWHM). A peak intensity of the laser pulse was $1 \times 10^{16}$ W/cm$^2$ with a spot diameter of 30 $\mu$m (FWHM) in vacuum. We demonstrated guiding of a laser pulse over length of up to 10 mm, which corresponded to 10 times the measured Rayleigh length. In addition, we also observed an electron acceleration of around 1 MeV by use of a 1- cm long gas-filled capillary waveguide at the discharge time of 150 ns.
Authors
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Takeshi Higashiguchi
Utsunomiya University
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Masafumi Hikida
Utsunomiya University
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Hiromitsu Terauchi
Utsunomiya University
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Kun Li
Utsunomiya University
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Noboru Yugami
Utsunomiya University
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Ryosuke Kodama
Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka Univ., ILE, Osaka University, Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University, Japan