Abstract

The resistive magnetic field plays a crucial role in determining the laser produced fast-electron transport in solid targets. The scaling of the resistive guiding is derived and benchmarked against two-dimensional collisional particle-in-cell simulations. We study the impact of the initial state of the material (Z dependence, conductor, or insulator) on global electron-transport patterns, and conclude that the initial state of a conductor or insulator is not important. Instead, global transport patterns depend on the material Z. The fast-electron transport seen in the simulations is consistent with the derived scaling rule. Previous experimental observations [e.g., R. B. Stephens et al., Phys. Rev. E 69, 066414 (2004) and Y. Sentoku et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 135005 (2011)] that show confinement or divergence in various regimes are also explained by our scaling. The presented scaling then becomes a useful tool to design compact radiation sources or fast ignitor experiments.

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