Collisionless shock acceleration of carbon ions in 1μm-laser-driven near-critical plasma

ORAL

Abstract

Collisionless shock acceleration of charged particles is ubiquitous in the cosmos and its successful adaptation in the laboratory using laser-driven plasmas has the potential for compact particle accelerators suitable for several applications. We report collisionless shock acceleration of narrow-energy-spread carbon ions to 30 MeV with 4% conversion efficiency. This is achieved using a 100 TW linearly polarized laser interacting with a carbon nanofoam target of near-critical density for the m-wavelength laser. The use of nanofoam near-critical target improves upon previous experiments with gas jets leading to low conversion efficiency or with exploding solid foils for which target pre-expansion needs to be optimized empirically. The variations in the accelerated ion spectra among different carbon ion species and proton radiography of the laser-driven near-critical plasma, together with kinetic simulations, provide detailed insight into the dynamics of the laboratory laser-driven collisionless shocks.

*Work supported by the Laboratory Directed Research and Development program at the Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Presenters

  • Chengkun Huang

    • Los Alamos National Laboratory
    • Los Alamos Natl Lab

Authors

  • Chengkun Huang

    • Los Alamos National Laboratory
    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • Sasi Palaniyappan

    • Los Alamos National Laboratory
    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
    • Los Alamos National Lab
  • Donald Gautier

    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • Frederico Fiuza

    • SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab
    • SLAC National Acceleratory Laboratory
  • Wenjun Ma

    • Peking University
  • Jörg Schreiber

    • Ludwig-Maximilian-University
  • Juan Carlos Fernandez

    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • Abel Raymer

    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • Russel Mortensen

    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • Raymond Gonzales

    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • Sha-Marie L Reid

    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • Tom Shimada

    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • Randall Johnson

    • Los Alamos Natl Lab