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Present and Future Experimental Capabilities of the ZEUS Facility

POSTER

Abstract

The Zettawatt Equivalent Ultrashort Pulse Laser System (ZEUS) at the University of Michigan is a National Science Foundation-funded user facility designed to support advanced research in high-intensity laser science. ZEUS features a dual-beamline, 3 petawatt-class laser system operating at one shot per minute, a programmable multi-nanosecond pulse driver delivering up to 100 J, and three radiation-shielded experimental areas. These capabilities enable cutting-edge investigations in areas such as nonlinear quantum electrodynamics, relativistic plasma physics, particle acceleration, nuclear photonics, and laboratory astrophysics. Facility access is granted through a competitive peer-review process based on scientific merit. This presentation will report on recent developments in laser and target area performance, as well as plans to enhance ZEUS Target Area 2 with high-intensity, 3 PW multibeam capability. It will also highlight early scientific results, including commissioning experiments on laser wakefield electron acceleration, betatron soft and hard x-ray generation, and their application to high-resolution imaging using a 2 PW laser beam.

Presenters

  • Anatoly M Maksimchuk

Authors

  • Anatoly M Maksimchuk

  • Yong Ma

  • Paul T Campbell

  • Milos Burger

  • John Nees

  • Bixue Hou

    University of MIchigan

  • Richard Anthony

  • Veronica Contreras

  • Nicholas P Ernst

    University of Michigan - Ann Arbor

  • Rebecca Fitzgarrald

  • Nicolas Kalem

  • Galina Kalinchenko

  • Sallee Rae Klein

  • William Likes

  • Monica Mashkevich

    University of MIchigan

  • Tanner Nutting

  • Jeremy M Rebenstock

  • Gregg Sucha

  • Richard Van Camp

  • Grant Young

  • Qing Zhang

  • Igor Jovanovic

  • Carolyn C Kuranz

    OCC

  • Alec G.R. GR Thomas

    Michigan University

  • Louise Willingale

  • Karl Michael Krushelnick