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Atomic and Laser Physics
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Prof Peter Norreys FInstP;

Professorial Research Fellow

Research theme

  • Accelerator physics
  • Lasers and high energy density science
  • Fundamental particles and interactions
  • Plasma physics

Sub department

  • Atomic and Laser Physics

Research groups

  • Oxford Centre for High Energy Density Science (OxCHEDS)
peter.norreys@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72220
Clarendon Laboratory, room 141.1
Peter Norreys' research group
  • About
  • Research
  • Teaching
  • Publications

Kinetic simulations of fusion ignition with hot-spot ablator mix

(2019)

Authors:

James D Sadler, Yingchao Lu, Benjamin Spiers, Marko W Mayr, Alex Savin, Robin HW Wang, Ramy Aboushelbaya, Kevin Glize, Robert Bingham, Hui Li, Kirk A Flippo, Peter A Norreys
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Suprathermal Electrons from the Anti-Stokes Langmuir Decay Instability Cascade

(2019)

Authors:

QS Feng, R Aboushelbaya, MW Mayr, BT Spiers, RW Paddock, I Ouatu, R Timmis, RHW Wang, LH Cao, ZJ Liu, CY Zheng, XT He, PA Norreys
More details from the publisher
Details from ArXiV

Energy absorption in the laser-QED regime

Scientific Reports Springer Nature 9 (2019) 8956

Authors:

Alex Savin, Aimee Ross, Ramy Aboushelbaya, Marko Mayr, Ben Spiers, Robin Wang, Peter Norreys

Abstract:

A theoretical and numerical investigation of non-ponderomotive absorption at laser intensities relevant to quantum electrodynamics is presented. It is predicted that there is a regime change in the dependence of fast electron energy on incident laser energy that coincides with the onset of pair production via the Breit-Wheeler process. This prediction is numerically verified via an extensive campaign of QED-inclusive particle-in-cell simulations. The dramatic nature of the power law shift leads to the conclusion that this process is a candidate for an unambiguous signature that future experiments on multi-petawatt laser facilities have truly entered the QED regime.
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Details from ORA
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First demonstration of ARC-accelerated proton beams at the National Ignition Facility

Physics of Plasmas 26:4 (2019)

Authors:

D Mariscal, T Ma, SC Wilks, AJ Kemp, GJ Williams, P Michel, H Chen, PK Patel, BA Remington, M Bowers, L Pelz, MR Hermann, W Hsing, D Martinez, R Sigurdsson, M Prantil, A Conder, J Lawson, M Hamamoto, P Di Nicola, C Widmayer, D Homoelle, R Lowe-Webb, S Herriot, W Williams, D Alessi, D Kalantar, R Zacharias, C Haefner, N Thompson, T Zobrist, D Lord, N Hash, A Pak, N Lemos, M Tabak, C McGuffey, J Kim, FN Beg, MS Wei, P Norreys, A Morace, N Iwata, Y Sentoku, D Neely, GG Scott, K Flippo

Abstract:

© 2019 Author(s). New short-pulse kilojoule, Petawatt-class lasers, which have recently come online and are coupled to large-scale, many-beam long-pulse facilities, undoubtedly serve as very exciting tools to capture transformational science opportunities in high energy density physics. These short-pulse lasers also happen to reside in a unique laser regime: very high-energy (kilojoule), relatively long (multi-picosecond) pulse-lengths, and large (10s of micron) focal spots, where their use in driving energetic particle beams is largely unexplored. Proton acceleration via Target Normal Sheath Acceleration (TNSA) using the Advanced Radiographic Capability (ARC) short-pulse laser at the National Ignition Facility in the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is demonstrated for the first time, and protons of up to 18 MeV are measured using laser irradiation of >1 ps pulse-lengths and quasi-relativistic (∼10 18 W/cm 2 ) intensities. This is indicative of a super-ponderomotive electron acceleration mechanism that sustains acceleration over long (multi-picosecond) time-scales and allows for proton energies to be achieved far beyond what the well-established scalings of proton acceleration via TNSA would predict at these modest intensities. Furthermore, the characteristics of the ARC laser (large ∼100 μm diameter focal spot, flat spatial profile, multi-picosecond, relatively low prepulse) provide acceleration conditions that allow for the investigation of 1D-like particle acceleration. A high flux ∼ 50 J of laser-accelerated protons is experimentally demonstrated. A new capability in multi-picosecond particle-in-cell simulation is applied to model the data, corroborating the high proton energies and elucidating the physics of multi-picosecond particle acceleration.
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Orbital angular momentum coupling in elastic photon-photon scattering

(2019)

Authors:

Ramy Aboushelbaya, Kevin Glize, Alexander F Savin, Marko Mayr, Benjamin Spiers, Robin Wang, John Collier, Mattias Marklund, Raoul MGM Trines, Robert Bingham, Peter A Norreys
More details from the publisher

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