Laser-Ion Lens and Accelerator

POSTER

Abstract

Generation of highly collimated monoenergetic relativistic ion beams is one of the most challenging and promising areas in ultra-intense laser-matter interactions. We address this challenge by introducing the concept of laser-ion lensing and acceleration (LILA). Using a simple analogy with a gradient-index lens, we demonstrate that simultaneous focusing and acceleration of ions are accomplished by illuminating a shaped solid-density target by laser pulse at $10^{22}W/cm^2$ intensity and using the radiation pressure to deform/focus the target into a cubic micron spot. We show that the LILA process can be approximated using a simple deformable mirror model, and the analytical solution of the model will be provided and compared with 3D particle-in-cell simulations. Extensive scans of the laser and target parameters in 3D PIC simulations identify the stable propagation regime where the Rayleigh-Taylor (RT)-like instability is suppressed. Stable focusing is found at different laser powers (from few- to multi-petawatt), different laser formats (planar or gaussian), and different target compositions (from simple hydrogen target to two-ion-species target). Depending on those parameters, a wide range of ion kinetic energies – from 200MeV to 750MeV – can be obtained.

* This work is supported by the award from the HEDLP NNSA Grant NA0003879. The authors thank the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at The University of Texas at Austin for providing HPC resources.

Authors

  • Tianhong Wang

    Cornell University

  • Vladimir Khudik

    The University of Texas at Austin, The University of Texas Austin

  • Gennady Shvets

    Cornell University