Abstract

Crossed beam energy transfer, CBET, in high-intensity laser–plasma interaction is investigated for the case of optically smoothed laser beams. In the two approaches to laser-driven inertial confinement fusion experiments, the direct-drive and the indirect-drive, CBET is of great importance because it governs the coupling of laser energy to the plasma. We use the two-dimensional wave-coupling code Harmony to simulate the transfer between two laser beams with speckle structure that overlap in a plasma with an inhomogeneous flow profile. We compare the CBET dynamics for laser beams with spatial incoherence and with spatio-temporal incoherence; in particular we apply the smoothing techniques using random phase plates (RPPs) and smoothing by spectral dispersion (SSD), respectively. It is found that for laser beams (wavelength λ0) with intensities (IL) above IL ∼ 2 × 1015 W cm−2(λ0/0.35 µm)−2(Te/keV), both the so-called plasma-induced smoothing as well as self-focusing in intense laser speckles induce temporal incoherence; the latter affects the CBET and the angular distribution of the light transmitted behind the zone of beam overlap. For RPP-smoothed incident beams, the resulting band width of the transmitted light can already be of the same order as the effective band width of the SSD available at major laser facilities. We examine the conditions when spatio-temporal smoothing techniques become efficient for CBET.This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Prospects for high gain inertial fusion energy (part 1)’.

Highlights

  • Crossed beam energy transfer, CBET, is a process that arises when two or more propagating laser beams intersect in an active medium like an underdense plasma [1,2,3]

  • CBET leads to a net transfer between the beam energy, if the induced plasma response is in resonance with the ponderomotive force

  • The understanding of the transfer between intense laser beams is of great importance for inertial confinement fusion (ICF), in order to control the laser–plasma coupling both for the direct drive and the indirect drive schemes

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Summary

Introduction

CBET, is a process that arises when two or more propagating laser beams intersect in an active medium like an underdense plasma [1,2,3]. We have found that nonlinear processes produced by the intense speckles in the flowing plasma such as beam bending [21,22,23] and plasma-induced smoothing [24,25,26] develop already at laser beam intensities, IL ∼ 2 × 1015 W cm−2(λ0/0.35 μm)−2(Te/keV) (with λ0 denoting the laser wavelength and Te the electron temperature) This is relevant for plasmas with sub-sonic flow, close to the sonic layer, for which it has been shown that the threshold for self-focusing is reduced as compared to stationary plasmas with zero flow velocity [27,28].

Geometry of interaction and numerical modelling
Simulation results
Conclusions
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