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Team of laser scientists in front of the GEMINI laser target chamber at the CLF.

The team in the GEMINI laser target area at the Central Laser Facility, Harwell.

Dr Robin Timmis

Post doctoral research assistant

Research theme

  • Accelerator physics
  • Lasers and high energy density science
  • Plasma physics

Sub department

  • Atomic and Laser Physics

Research groups

  • Laser fusion and extreme field physics
  • Oxford Centre for High Energy Density Science (OxCHEDS)
robin.timmis@physics.ox.ac.uk
Clarendon Laboratory, room 244
  • About
  • Publications

Attoseconds and the exascale: on laser-plasma surface interactions

Abstract:

Laser peak powers rise inexorably higher, enabling the study of increasingly exotic high-energy-density plasmas. This thesis explores one such phenomenon, that of the interaction between a relativistically intense laser pulse and a solid-density plasma. The laser pulse is reflected. Both the reflected radiation and the electron bunches that induce the interaction have fascinating properties. Through the application of theory, simulation and experiment, this thesis strives to extend our understanding of this mechanism and thus direct the community towards potential applications for these sources. Of primary interest is the development of novel diagnostic tools. Theories have been developed and tested to describe the production of low emittance nano-Coulomb charge electron bunches. Such properties are comparable to forefront synchrotron sources but on a considerably more compact scale. These results have wide-reaching implications for future particle accelerator science and associated technologies. Furthermore, these electron bunches will initiate QED processes on next-generation laser facilities. The radiation they produce is composed of high harmonics of the incident laser pulse. This radiation can be coherently focused to unprecedented intensities and is of ultra-short duration, possibly even entering the zeptosecond regime. The intensity of X-ray harmonics has been measured on the ORION laser facility producing results consistent with theory and enabling the benchmarking of peak intensity simulations with real data. The work of this thesis has amassed interest within the community and in June 2024 its ideas will be tested on the GEMINI PW laser facility.
Details from ORA

Relativistic harmonics in the efficiency limit

Nature Springer Nature

Authors:

Robin Timmis, Colm Fitzpatrick, Jonathan Kennedy, Holly Huddleston, Elliott Denis, Abigail James, Chris Baird, Dan Symes, David McGonegle, Eduard Atonga, Heath Martin, Jeremy Rebenstock, John Neely, Jordan Lee, Nicolas Bourgeois, Oliver Finlay, Rusko Ruskov, Sam Astbury, Steve Hawkes, Zixin Zhang, Matt Zepf, Karl Krushelnick, Edward Gumbrell, Rajeev Pattathil, Mark Yeung, Brendan Dromey, Peter Norreys

Abstract:

Bright high harmonic radiation from relativistically oscillating laser-plasmas offers a direct route to generating extreme electromagnetic fields. Theory shows that under optimised conditions the plasma medium can support strong spatiotemporal compression of laser energy into a Coherent Harmonic Focus (CHF), delivering intensity boosts many orders of magnitude above that of the incident driving laser pulse [1–4]. Although diffraction-limited performance [5] (spatial compression) and attosecond phase-locking [6] (temporal compression) have been demonstrated in the laboratory, efficient coupling of highly relativistic laser pulse energy into the emitted harmonic cone has not been realised to date. Here, conclusive evidence confirms that the relativistic laserplasma interaction can be tailored to deliver the maximum conversion efficiencies predicted from simulations. By fine-tuning the temporal profile of the driving laser pulse on femtosecond (fs, 10−15 s) timescales, energies > 9 mJ between the 12th and 47th harmonics (18 eV to 73 eV) are observed. These results are shown to be in excellent agreement with the theoretically expected efficiency dependence on harmonic order, indicating that optimal conditions have been achieved in the generation process. This is the important final element required to achieve the expected intensity boosts from a CHF in the laboratory. Although obtaining spatiotemporal compression and optimal efficiency simultaneously remains challenging, the path to realising extreme optical field strengths approaching the critical field of quantum electrodynamics (the Schwinger limit at > 1016V/m or > 1029 W cm−2 ) is now open, permitting all-optical studies of the quantum vacuum and drawing new horizons for intense attosecond science.
Details from ORA

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