Characterizing Bragg Diffraction Efficiency for Plasma Transmission Gratings of Various Lengths
POSTER
Abstract
Plasma optics offers a promising approach to the advancement of high power laser systems, which is currently limited by damage thresholds of solid optical components. By temporally overlapping and interfering two femtosecond pulses, a plasma density structure with periodic refractive index modulation is created through ionization to form a transmission plasma grating. In this work, we diffract a probe beam (linearly polarized, 800 nm, 25 fs, 0.26 mJ) from a plasma transmission grating formed by crossing two pump beams (linearly polarized orthogonal to probe, 800 nm, 25 fs, 0.69 mJ and 0.39 mJ) inside a gas cell filled with CO2 gas. We show that the Bragg diffraction efficiency initially increases with grating length up to an observed maximum. Grating length ranges from ~ 0 mm to ~ 3 mm and is controlled by using gas cell window plugs of different lengths. The diffracted probe beam is captured with a camera after passing through the gas cell and scattering from a Teflon screen. The grating structure is observed using shadowgraphy and the plasma density inside the gas cell is measured with a Mach-Zehnder interferometer. These results show the comparability of Bragg diffraction in plasma optics and conventional optics, while demonstrating the advantage of plasma optics in high power laser systems.
Presenters
-
Michelle M Wang
Princeton University
Authors
-
Michelle M Wang
Princeton University
-
Nicholas M Fasano
Princeton University
-
Victor Perez-Ramirez
Stanford University
-
Andreas M Giakas
Princeton University
-
Pierre A Michel
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, LLNL, Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab
-
Julia M Mikhailova
Princeton University
-
Matthew R Edwards
Stanford University