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Observation of ultrafast solid-density plasma dynamics using femtosecond X-ray pulses from a free-electron laser

Authors :
Kluge, Thomas
Rödel, Melanie
Metzkes, Josefine
Pelka, Alexander
Garcia, Alejandro Laso
Prencipe, Irene
Rehwald, Martin
Nakatsutsumi, Motoaki
McBride, Emma E.
Schönherr, Tommy
Garten, Marco
Hartley, Nicholas J.
Zacharias, Malte
Erbe, Arthur
Georgiev, Yordan M.
Galtier, Eric
Nam, Inhyuk
Lee, Hae Ja
Glenzer, Siegfried
Bussmann, Michael
Gutt, Christian
Zeil, Karl
Rödel, Christian
Hübner, Uwe
Schramm, Ulrich
Cowan, Thomas E.
Source :
Phys. Rev. X 8, 031068 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The complex physics of the interaction between short pulse high intensity lasers and solids is so far hardly accessible by experiments. As a result of missing experimental capabilities to probe the complex electron dynamics and competing instabilities, this impedes the development of compact laser-based next generation secondary radiation sources, e.g. for tumor therapy [Bulanov2002,ledingham2007], laboratory-astrophysics [Remington1999,Bulanov2015], and fusion [Tabak2014]. At present, the fundamental plasma dynamics that occur at the nanometer and femtosecond scales during the laser-solid interaction can only be elucidated by simulations. Here we show experimentally that small angle X-ray scattering of femtosecond X-ray free-electron laser pulses facilitates new capabilities for direct in-situ characterization of intense short-pulse laser plasma interaction at solid density that allows simultaneous nanometer spatial and femtosecond temporal resolution, directly verifying numerical simulations of the electron density dynamics during the short pulse high intensity laser irradiation of a solid density target. For laser-driven grating targets, we measure the solid density plasma expansion and observe the generation of a transient grating structure in front of the pre-inscribed grating, due to plasma expansion, which is an hitherto unknown effect. We expect that our results will pave the way for novel time-resolved studies, guiding the development of future laser-driven particle and photon sources from solid targets.

Subjects

Subjects :
Physics - Plasma Physics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Phys. Rev. X 8, 031068 (2018)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1801.08404
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.8.031068