Measuring the polarization-dependent X-ray flash from a QED plasma

ORAL

Abstract

During the development of laser facilities over the last 30 years, the advent of multi-PW lasers has opened the door to new regimes of physics within a laboratory setting. As higher intensities have become possible, quantum electrodynamic (QED) effects are becoming more relevant to the study of plasmas and their dynamics in the incredibly strong electromagnetic fields in the focal spots of these lasers. In these QED plasmas, strong-field processes such as nonlinear Compton scattering (NLCS) and nonlinear Breit-Wheeler electron-positron pair creation play a significant role in the system dynamics, so it's important to identify when such a plasma has been produced. Our experiment at the ZEUS high-power laser facility looked for evidence of the characteristic X-ray flash produced by NLCS during the formation of a QED plasma as accelerated electrons radiate much of their energy in a single burst. Particle-in-cell codes have shown that this radiation is polarized in the same direction as the laser, differentiating it from the unpolarized background bremsstrahlung emission that can conceal the signal of interest. Thus, by rotating the incident polarization and using a crystal polarimeter that preferentially reflects s-polarized light, we looked for polarization-dependent differences in the signal that could be attributed to the presence of the X-ray flash. In addition, we fielded novel gamma spectrometers at two different positions to measure angular differences in the emitted spectra along the laser axis and perpendicular to target normal. This talk will cover an overview of the experiment and our preliminary results.

*This work is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy NNSA Center of Excellence under cooperative agreement number DE-NA0004146 and is based upon research conducted at the ZEUS facility which is supported by the National Science Foundation under award 2126181. The authors acknowledge the support of the Vulcan dark period community support programme 24-2, funding from the Royal Society URF-R1221874 (E.G.), and EPSRC grant No. EP/V049461/1.

Presenters

  • Rebecca J Herbst

    • University of Michigan

Authors

  • Rebecca J Herbst

    • University of Michigan
  • Kate L Lancaster

    • University of York
  • Ewan J Dolier

    • University of Strathclyde
  • Gabriele M Grittani

    • ELI-Beamlines
    • ELI ERIC; ELI Beamlines
  • Conor A McAnespie

    • Queen's University of Belfast
  • Nathan Smith

    • University of York
  • Sergei V Bulanov

    • ELI Beamlines - International Laser Research Centre
  • Paul T Campbell

    • University of Michigan
  • Elias Gerstmayr

    • Queen's University of Belfast
  • Ross Gray

    • University of Strathclyde
  • Prokopis Hadjisolomou

    • ELI Beamlines
  • Brendan Kettle

    • Imperial College London
  • Yong Ma

    • University of Michigan
  • Stuart P Mangles

    • Imperial College London
  • Paul McKenna

    • University of Strathclyde
  • Alexander S Pirozhkov

    • National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology
  • Qian Qian

    • University of Michigan
  • Gianluca Sarri

    • Queen's University of Belfast
  • Alec G.R. GR Thomas

    • University of Michigan
    • Michigan University
  • Nigel C Woolsey

    • University of York
  • Xu Zhao

    • University of York
  • Christopher P Ridgers

    • York Plasma Institute, School of Physics, Engineering and Technology, University of York