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Relativistically-Transparent Magnetic Filament Experiments at the BELLA iP2 Petawatt Laser

ORAL

Abstract

We present the results of experiments performed using the BELLA iP2 laser system, in which we interact a high-intensity (>1021 W/cm2) laser pulse with a relativistically transparent plasma (𝑛𝑐<𝑛𝑒<π‘›π‘π‘Ž0, for critical density 𝑛𝑐, electron density 𝑛𝑒, and normalized laser amplitude π‘Ž0). Relativistic transparency allows the laser pulse to enter the plasma, where it drives an axial electron current and generates a magnetic filament with field strength of the order of the laser amplitude (>105 Tesla). When the electron density is greater than 0.01 Γ— π‘›π‘π‘Ž0, this magnetic filament traps the electron orbits, enabling direct laser acceleration of the electrons and efficient conversion of laser energy into MeV photons by synchrotron-like radiation. Analytical scaling laws in the ultrafast regime (Ο„ β‰ͺ 1 ps) predict that the re-radiated gamma-ray energy and the efficiency of radiation both scale inversely with density. We present results from irradiating microchannel targets of varying lengths (20β€”100 ΞΌm) filled with a range of foam densities (5β€”15 mg/cc). We compare the results with predictions from analytical scaling laws and 3-D particle-in-cell simulations to assess the dependence of electron acceleration on plasma density. This material is based upon work supported by the Department of Energy [National Nuclear Security Administration] University of Rochester β€œNational Inertial Confinement Fusion Program” under Award Number(s) DE-NA0004144.

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Presenters

  • Matthew Albert VanDusen-Gross

    University of Rochester Laboratory for Laser Energetics

Authors

  • Matthew Albert VanDusen-Gross

    University of Rochester Laboratory for Laser Energetics

  • Soham Banerjee

    University of Rochester Laboratory for Laser Energetics

  • Veronica Contreras

  • Lulu Russell

    MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center

  • Aodhan McIlvenny

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Lieselotte Obst-Huebl

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Jan-Patrick Schwinkendorf

    European XFEL

  • Kale Weichman

    Laboratory for Laser Energetics (LLE)

  • Louise Willingale

  • Hans G Rinderknecht

    Laboratory for Laser Energetics (LLE), University of Rochester