Plasma Mirrors as Optical Components for the Manipulation of Intense Light

ORAL

Abstract

The replacement of standard optical components with a toolkit of plasma-based optics allows the construction of compact high-peak-power laser systems. Plasma mirrors form a key part of this toolkit, permitting reflection of relativistic intensities, temporal contrast and spatial mode cleaning, and the efficient generation of harmonics of the initial laser pulse. We characterize the emission of upshifted frequencies from plasma mirrors into the relativistic regime both experimentally, with a 25 fs, 400 mJ laser system, and with particle-in-cell simulations across a broad range of parameters, showing in particular how sequences of cascaded plasma mirrors can improve beam quality and the efficiency of harmonic generation.

*This work was supported by NSF grant No. PHY 1506372 and DOE grant No. DE-SC0017907.

Presenters

  • Matthew R Edwards

    • Princeton Univ
    • Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Princeton University

Authors

  • Matthew R Edwards

    • Princeton Univ
    • Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Princeton University
  • Tim Bennett

    • Princeton Univ
  • Alec Griffith

    • Princeton Univ
  • Nicholas M Fasano

    • Princeton Univ
  • Bradley O'Brien

    • Princeton Univ
  • Nikita Turley

    • Princeton Univ
  • Julia Mikhailova

    • Princeton Univ