Order of magnitude increase in laser-target coupling at near-relativistic intensities using compound parabolic concentrators

Phys. Rev. E 103, 031201 (2021) Achieving a high conversion efficiency into relativistic electrons is central to short-pulse laser application and fundamentally relies on creating interaction regions with intensities ${\gg}10^{18}$~W/cm$^2$. Small focal length optics are typically employed to achiev...

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Main Authors: Williams, Gerald Jackson, Link, Anthony J, Sherlock, Mark William, Alessi, David A, Bowers, Mark W, Golick, Brad, Hamamoto, Matt, Hermann, Mark R, Kalantar, Dan, LaFortune, Kai Nicholas, Mackinnon, Andrew James, MacPhee, Andrew, Manuel, Mario J. -E, Martinez, David, Mauldin, Michael, Pelz, Lawrence J, Prantil, Matt, Quinn, Matthew, Remington, Bruce A, Sigurdsson, Ron, Wegner, Paul J, Youngblood, Kelly, Chen, Hui
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: 21-12-2020
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Summary:Phys. Rev. E 103, 031201 (2021) Achieving a high conversion efficiency into relativistic electrons is central to short-pulse laser application and fundamentally relies on creating interaction regions with intensities ${\gg}10^{18}$~W/cm$^2$. Small focal length optics are typically employed to achieve this goal; however, this solution is impractical for large kJ-class systems that are constrained by facility geometry, debris concerns, and component costs. We fielded target-mounted compound parabolic concentrators to overcome these limitations and achieved nearly an order of magnitude increase to the conversion efficiency and more than tripled electron temperature compared to flat targets. Particle-in-cell simulations demonstrate that plasma confinement within the cone and formation of turbulent laser fields that develop from cone wall reflections are responsible for the improved laser-to-target coupling. {These passive target components can be used to improve the coupling efficiency for all high-intensity short-pulse laser applications, particularly at large facilities with long focal length optics.
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2012.11563