The effect of laser pulse duration on proton radiography
ORAL
Abstract
Proton radiography is a valuable and popular diagnostic for measuring the quasi-static electromagnetic fields generated in high-energy-density (HED) experiments. The qualities of laser-driven, target-normal sheath acceleration (TNSA) proton beams have been previously demonstrated to have excellent laminarity and small virtual source size making them suitable for imaging. The broad-energy range of the TNSA protons allows time-of-flight chirping to observe the temporal evolution of fields on the $\sim 1$--$100$ ps timescales in a single shot and laser parameters influence the choice of optimal target thickness. Here, the OMEGA EP facility was used to experimentally consider the effect of the laser pulse duration (between 1 ps and 100 ps), intensity and target angle of incidence on the proton beam qualities of uniformity, image visibility, energy spectra and divergence. Two-dimensional particle-in-cell modeling examines the acceleration mechanisms to explain the degrading beam quality for longer pulse durations. These results will help guide future experimental and laser system designs.
*The authors would like to acknowledge the OSIRIS Consortium, consisting of UCLA and IST (Lisbon, Portugal) for the for providing access to the OSIRIS 4.0 framework. Work supported by NSF ACI-1339893.
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Presenters
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Louise Willingale
- Univ of Michigan - Ann Arbor
- University of Michigan