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Zetawatt Equivalent Ultrashort laser pulse System (ZEUS) - Laser construction

POSTER

Abstract

The National Science Foundation-funded Zetawatt Equivalent Ultrashort laser pulse System (ZEUS) is due for completion in 2024. Parts of the facility are currently undergoing commissioning and will provide for the first year of user experiments in 2023. The 1.5J front-end of the ZEUS laser chain is an Amplitude Lasers Pulsar that incorporates double Chirped Pulse Amplification (CPA), three programmable phase/amplitude devices, and Cross-Polarization Wave (XPW) modulation to enhance contrast. Its pulses are isolated from experimental interactions with additional Pockels cells, boosted to 9J in a home-built amplifier, and directed through a vacuum-based compressor. The measured 26fs pulse duration and compressor efficiency of ~70% show power on the order of 200TW, which will be capable of burst-mode operation at 1Hz or 5Hz. Using these pulses, an in-house commissioning experiment yielded electron beams with energies up to 400MeV and with 2mrad divergence. We will report on further commissioning results, give a roadmap for the first year of operation with shots up to 1PW, and note the remaining steps to full 3PW operation in 2024.

Presenters

  • John Nees

    University of Michigan, UM

Authors

  • John Nees

    University of Michigan, UM

  • Anatoly M Maksimchuk

    University of Michigan

  • Bixue Hou

    University of Michigan, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

  • Galina Kalinchenko

    University of Michigan, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

  • Andrew McKelvey

    University of Michigan

  • Yong Ma

    University of Michigan

  • Lauren Weinberg

    University of Michigan, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

  • Richard Van Camp

    University of Michigan, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

  • Paul T Campbell

    University of Michigan

  • Karl Krushelnick

    University of Michigan