Abstract

Ion acceleration driven by the interaction of an ultraintense (2 × 1020 W cm−2) laser pulse with an ultrathin ( nm) foil target is experimentally and numerically investigated. Protons accelerated by sheath fields and via laser radiation pressure are angularly separated and identified based on their directionality and signature features (e.g. transverse instabilities) in the measured spatial-intensity distribution. A low divergence, high energy proton component is also detected when the heated target electrons expand and the target becomes relativistically transparent during the interaction. 2D and 3D particle-in-cell simulations indicate that under these conditions a plasma jet is formed at the target rear, supported by a self-generated azimuthal magnetic field, which extends into the expanded layer of sheath-accelerated protons. Electrons trapped within this jet are directly accelerated to super-thermal energies by the portion of the laser pulse transmitted through the target. The resulting streaming of the electrons into the ion layers enhances the energy of protons in the vicinity of the jet. Through the addition of a controlled prepulse, the maximum energy of these protons is demonstrated experimentally and numerically to be sensitive to the picosecond rising edge profile of the laser pulse.

Highlights

  • The strong electric fields excited in dense plasma by intense laser pulses enable the acceleration of ions to multiMeV energies over short distances

  • The results provide new insight into the complex physics occurring in ultrathin foils undergoing relativistic induced transparency

  • It is shown that Target normal sheath acceleration (TNSA), Radiation pressure acceleration (RPA) and transparency-enhanced/break-out afterburner (BOA) acceleration can all occur, at different stages in the laser pulse interaction with the target, and that the individual mechanisms can be investigated by angularly separating the ion beams produced

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Summary

16 October 2015

Commons Attribution 3.0 Keywords: laser–plasma interactions, relativistic transparency, ion acceleration, plasma jet licence.

Introduction
Experiment results
Simulations
Energy exchange and sensitivity to the laser rising edge profile
Discussion
Full Text
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