Channel Formation and Transverse Ion Acceleration from High-Intensity Laser Interactions with Underdense Plasma on OMEGA EP
ORAL
Abstract
Experiments were performed at the OMEGA EP laser facility to study the direct laser acceleration (DLA) of electrons in an underdense plasma created from a helium gas target. In these experiments, the ponderomotive force expels electrons from the regions of highest laser intensity to form a channel. The charge separation creates a strong transverse electric field that accelerates ions radially through a Coulomb explosion; it is the same radial channel field, along with the electron beam-generated azimuthal magnetic field, that facilitates DLA. Since the channel formation is key to understanding electron acceleration, the transversely accelerated helium ions, measured with a Thomson Parabola Ion Energy (TPIE) spectrometer, provide an interesting complementary measurement for understanding the electric field strengths inside the channel. Furthermore, from data collected with a proton probe we aim to understand the properties of the channel fields, the same fields from which the ions have been accelerated.
*This work is supported by the Department of Energy / NNSA under Award Number DE-NA0004030 and DE-SC0021057 . The experiment was conducted at the Omega Laser Facility at the University of Rochester's Laboratory for Laser Energetics with the beam time through the National Laser Users Facility (NLUF) program. The OSIRIS Consortium (UCLA and IST, Lisbon, Portugal) is acknowledged for providing access to the OSIRIS 4.0 framework. Work supported by NSF ACI-1339893.
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Presenters
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Veronica Contreras
- University of Michigan