Tracking the surface motion of nanometer-scale foils during interactions with ultra-intense laser pulses
ORAL
Abstract
The surface motion of nanometer-scale foils during irradiation by a relativistically intense ($>$~$10^{20}$~W$/$cm$^{-2}$) laser pulse has been measured using frequency resolved optical gating (FROG) revealing the acceleration of the plasma boundary due to radiation pressure of the laser. Extreme acceleration $\approx 10^{20}$~ms$^{-2}$ leads to velocities $\approx 1$~\% of the speed of light within the duration (50~fs FWHM) of the incident pulse. This gives maximum proton energies from hole-boring acceleration of a few MeV, lower than the experimentally observed maximum energy. This indicates that acceleration of ions beyond the critical surface is occurring, such as is described by sheath acceleration where fast electrons propagate through the plasma to create an accelerating field at the rear surface. For these interactions, which had a pulse contrast of $10^{6}$ at 1~ps, evidence of initial plasma expansion towards the laser was observed, followed by inward acceleration during the most intense period of the pulse. Targets thinner than the relativistic skin-depth appear to become significantly transparent to the laser.
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