Abstract

Electromagnetic emission via linear mode conversion from electron plasma waves (EPWs) excited by stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) of an incident laser pulse in inhomogeneous plasma is investigated theoretically and numerically. It is found that the mode conversion can occur naturally in underdense plasma region below the quarter critical density provided that EPWs are generated due to the development of backward SRS when the laser pulse is incident at certain angle with the plasma density gradient. The produced radiation may cover a broad frequency range up to half of the incident laser frequency. The dependence of the radiation conversion efficiency on the laser intensity, incident angle, laser pulse duration, plasma density scale length, and initial electron temperature is analyzed based on one-dimensional particle-in-cell simulation. In two-dimensional geometry, due to the development of sideward SRS, it is found that the mode conversion to occur even at normal incidence of the laser pulse. The radiation frequency, bandwidth, duration, and amplitude can be well controlled by the laser and plasma parameters, suggesting that it may provide a new source of tunable broadband radiation as well as a diagnosis of the development of SRS.

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