Abstract

An efficient plasma compression scheme using azimuthally polarized light is proposed. Azimuthally polarized light possesses a donutlike intensity pattern, enabling it to compress and accelerate ions toward the optical axis across a wide range of parameters. When the light intensity reaches the relativistic regime of 10^{18}W/cm^{2}, and the plasma density is below the critical density, protons can be compressed and accelerated by the toroidal soliton formed by the light. The expansion process of the soliton can be well described by the snowplow model. Three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations show that within the soliton regime, despite the ion density exceeding ten times the critical density, the ions' energy is insufficient for efficient neutron production. When the light intensity increases to 10^{22}W/cm^{2}, and the plasma density reaches several tens of times the critical density, deuterium ions can be compressed to thousands of times the critical density and simultaneously accelerated to the MeV level by tightly focused azimuthally polarized light during the hole-boring process. This process is far more dramatic compared to the soliton regime and can produce up to 10^{4} neutrons in a few light cycles. Moreover, in the subsequent beam-target stage, neutron yield is estimated to exceed 10^{8}. Finally, we present a comparison with the results obtained using a radially polarized light to examine the influence of light polarization.

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