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Near Field Spatial Mode Modification of Ultraintense Pulse Through Relativistically Transparent Solid Density Targets using Light with and without Orbital Angular Momentum

ORAL

Abstract

Relativistic Transparency (RT) in laser-matter interactions occurs when light incident on an opaque plasma becomes intense enough to drive electrons at relativistic speeds, dropping the effective electron density of the plasma below critical so that it becomes transparent. RT in solid-density targets using ultraintense light (>1020 W/cm2) is still an active research area, with many studies focusing on the turn-on time of the interaction [1]. A recent pump-probe experiment performed at the Scarlet Laser Facility has measured the turn-on and turn-off time scale as well as relativistic polarization effects [2]. Here we discuss the effects to the spatial mode of a pump-only transmitted beam through ultrathin (<30 nm) solid-density targets made in situ using liquid crystal films at the Scarlet laser facility. The interaction was performed using a traditional TEM00 beam mode as well as an l=1 Laguerre-Gaussian (LG) beam mode at a peak incident intensity of 0.5-1 x 1021 W/cm2. We describe measurements of the transmitted spatial mode of the TEM00 and LG beams.

[1] Palaniyappan, S., et al. Dynamics of relativistic transparency and optical shuttering in expanding overdense plasma. Nature Phys 8, 762-769 (2012)

[2] Zingale, A. et al. in preparation

Presenters

  • Nicholas Czapla

    Ohio State Univ - Columbus, Ohio State University

Authors

  • Nicholas Czapla

    Ohio State Univ - Columbus, Ohio State University

  • Anthony Zingale

    Ohio State Univ - Columbus, Ohio State University

  • German Tiscareno

    Ohio State Univ - Columbus, The Ohio State University, Ohio State University

  • Derek Nasir

    Ohio State Univ - Columbus, Ohio State University

  • Douglass W Schumacher

    Ohio State Univ - Columbus, Ohio State University

  • Mihail O Cernaianu

    Extreme Light Infrastructure-Nuclear Physics

  • Petru Chenuche

    Extreme Light Infrastructure-Nuclear Physics

  • Domenico Doria

    Extreme Light Infrastructure-Nuclear Physics, ELI-NP

  • Florin Negoita

    Extreme Light Infrastructure-Nuclear Physics

  • David R. R Blackman

    University of California San Diego, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, California 92093-0411, USA

  • Alexey Arefiev

    University of California, San Diego, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, California 92093-0411, USA

  • Dan Stutman

    Johns Hopkins University