Time evolution of transient plasma states from nanowire arrays irradiated at relativistic intensities

ORAL

Abstract

Understanding the evolution of extreme states of matter driven by relativistic laser-plasma interactions is a fundamental problem in high-field physics. This is especially true for nanostructured targets, where hydrodynamic effects play a key role within the ultra-fast time scale of laser absorption. Nanowire array targets are of particular interest as they provide an efficient means to access the ultra-high-energy-density regime due to their increased optical absorption, and have been shown to act as very efficient x-ray emission sources. I will present analysis of time-resolved x-ray emission spectroscopy from petawatt-irradiated Nickel nanowire arrays, used to characterise the conditions achieved when scaling the performance of nanowire targets to relativistic intensities. A full time evolution of the plasma conditions is extracted from the experimental data, and shows good agreement with the physical interaction picture developed by prior computational studies.

Authors

  • O.S. Humphries

    • University of Oxford
  • P. Allan

    • AWE
  • C.R.D. Brown

    • AWE
  • L.M.R. Hobbs

    • AWE
  • S.F. James

    • AWE
  • M.G. Ramsay

    • AWE
  • B. Williams

    • AWE
  • D.J. Hoarty

    • AWE
  • M.P. Hill

    • AWE
  • S.M. Vinko

    • University of Oxford