Laser-Plasma Particle-in-Cell Simulation Reproducibility and QED Effects

POSTER

Abstract

The goals of discovering quantum radiation dynamics in high-intensity laser-plasma interactions and engineering new laser-driven high-energy particle sources both require accurate and robust predictions. We demonstrate a characteristic dipole pattern of high-energy photon emission that results when the laser pulse bores through the target, forming a channel that enhances the laser field. We establish that the phenomenon is robust by showing that the dipole pattern gradually switches on as a function of target density, and with no need for wavelength-scale structure in the target, as used in previous work. This phenomenon is robust to experimentally motivated perturbations including a preplasma and non-normal laser-target angle. We analyze statistical uncertainties that result from running the same simulation multiple times with different random seeds and compare results from two particle-in-cell codes.

*Work performed under the auspices of the U.S. DOE and the University of Texas at Austin and was supported by the LANL ASC program and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (FA9550-14-1-0045). HPC resources provided by TACC, LANL, and XSEDE. LA-UR-18-25717

Presenters

  • Scott V. Luedtke

    • Univ of Texas, Austin
    • Univ of Texas, Austin, Los Alamos Natl Lab

Authors

  • Scott V. Luedtke

    • Univ of Texas, Austin
    • Univ of Texas, Austin, Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • Lin Yin

    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
    • Los Alamos National Laboratory
  • Lance Labun

    • Univ of Texas, Austin
  • Ou Z. Labun

    • Univ of Texas, Austin
  • Brian James Albright

    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
    • Los Alamos National Laboratory
  • David J. Stark

    • Los Alamos National Laboratory
    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • Robert F. Bird

    • Los Alamos National Laboratory
    • LANL
    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • William D Nystrom

    • Los Alamos National Laboratory
    • LANL
    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • B. Manuel Hegelich

    • Gwangju Inst of Sci & Tech, Univ of Texas, Austin
    • University of Texas at Austin
    • University of Texas Austin, Center of Relativistic Laser Science - Institute of Basic Science
    • Univ of Texas, Austin