Volumetric Heating of Ultra-High Energy Density Relativistic Plasmas by Ultrafast Laser Irradiation of Aligned Nanowire Arrays

ORAL

Abstract

We have demonstrated the volumetric heating of near-solid density plasmas to keV temperatures by ultra-high contrast femtosecond laser irradiation of arrays of vertically aligned nanowires with an average density up to 30{\%} solid density. X-ray spectra show that irradiation of Ni and Au nanowire arrays with laser pulses of relativistic intensities ionizes plasma volumes several micrometers in depth to the He-like and Co-like (Au 52$+)$ stages respectively.\footnote{M. Purvis \textit{et al.}, Nature Photonics 7, 796 (2013).} The penetration depth of the heat into the nanowire array was measured monitoring He-like Co lines from irradiated arrays in which the nanowires are composed of a Co segment buried under a selected length of Ni. The measurement shows the ionization reaches He-like Co for depth of up to 5 $\mu$m within the target. This volumetric plasma heating approach creates a new laboratory plasma regime in which extreme plasma parameters can be accessed with table-top lasers. Scaling to higher laser intensities promises to create plasmas with temperatures and pressures approaching those in the center of the sun.\footnote{Purvis (2013)}

*Work supported by the U.S Department of Energy, Fusion Energy Sciences and the Defense Threat Reduction Agency grant HDTRA-1-10-1-0079. A.P was supported by of DFG-funded project TR18.

Authors

  • Clayton Bargsten

    • Colorado State University
  • Reed Hollinger

    • Colorado State University
  • Vyacheslav Shlyaptsev

    • Colorado State University
  • Alexander Pukhov

    • Heinrich-Heine-Universit\"at D\"usseldorf
  • David Keiss

    • Colorado State University
  • Amanda Townsend

    • Colorado State University
  • Yong Wang

    • Colorado State University
  • Shoujun Wang

    • Colorado State University
  • Amy Prieto

    • Colorado State University
  • Jorge Rocca

    • Colorado State University