Femtosecond diffraction studies of solid and liquid phase changes in shock-compressed bismuth.

Scientific reports 8:1 (2018) 16927-16927

Authors:

MG Gorman, AL Coleman, R Briggs, RS McWilliams, D McGonegle, CA Bolme, AE Gleason, E Galtier, HJ Lee, E Granados, M Śliwa, C Sanloup, S Rothman, DE Fratanduono, RF Smith, GW Collins, JH Eggert, JS Wark, MI McMahon

Abstract:

Bismuth has long been a prototypical system for investigating phase transformations and melting at high pressure. Despite decades of experimental study, however, the lattice-level response of Bi to rapid (shock) compression and the relationship between structures occurring dynamically and those observed during slow (static) compression, are still not clearly understood. We have determined the structural response of shock-compressed Bi to 68 GPa using femtosecond X-ray diffraction, thereby revealing the phase transition sequence and equation-of-state in unprecedented detail for the first time. We show that shocked-Bi exhibits a marked departure from equilibrium behavior - the incommensurate Bi-III phase is not observed, but rather a new metastable phase, and the Bi-V phase is formed at significantly lower pressures compared to static compression studies. We also directly measure structural changes in a shocked liquid for the first time. These observations reveal new behaviour in the solid and liquid phases of a shocked material and give important insights into the validity of comparing static and dynamic datasets.

Emittance Preservation in an Aberration-Free Active Plasma Lens

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society (2018)

Authors:

CA Lindstrøm, E Adli, G Boyle, R Corsini, AE Dyson, W Farabolini, SM Hooker, M Meisel, J Osterhoff, J-H Röckemann, L Schaper, KN Sjobak

Abstract:

Active plasma lensing is a compact technology for strong focusing of charged particle beams, which has gained considerable interest for use in novel accelerator schemes. While providing kT/m focusing gradients, active plasma lenses can have aberrations caused by a radially nonuniform plasma temperature profile, leading to degradation of the beam quality. We present the first direct measurement of this aberration, consistent with theory, and show that it can be fully suppressed by changing from a light gas species (helium) to a heavier gas species (argon). Based on this result, we demonstrate emittance preservation for an electron beam focused by an argon-filled active plasma lens.

Direct observation of plasma waves and dynamics induced by laser-accelerated electron beams

(2018)

Authors:

MF Gilljohann, H Ding, A Döpp, J Goetzfried, S Schindler, G Schilling, S Corde, A Debus, T Heinemann, B Hidding, SM Hooker, A Irman, O Kononenko, T Kurz, A Martinez de la Ossa, U Schramm, S Karsch

Single-shot frequency-resolved optical gating for retrieving the pulse shape of high energy picosecond pulses

Review of Scientific Instruments AIP Publishing 89:10 (2018) 103509

Authors:

R Aboushelbaya, Alexander Savin, L Ceurvorst, J Sadler, PA Norreys, AS Davies, DH Froula, A Boyle, M Galimberti, P Oliveira, B Parry, Y Katzir, K Glize

Abstract:

Accurate characterization of laser pulses used in experiments is a crucial step to the analysis of their results. In this paper, a novel single-shot frequency-resolved optical gating (FROG) device is described, one that incorporates a dispersive element which allows it to fully characterize pulses up to 25 ps in duration with a 65 fs per pixel temporal resolution. A newly developed phase retrieval routine based on memetic algorithms is implemented and shown to circumvent the stagnation problem that often occurs with traditional FROG analysis programs when they encounter a local minimum.

Spatially-resolved common-path high-order harmonic interferometry

Optics Letters Optical Society of America 43:21 (2018) 5275-5278

Authors:

MM Mang, David T Lloyd, PN Anderson, Daniel J Treacher, AS Wyatt, Simon M Hooker, Ian A Walmsley, Kevin O'Keeffe

Abstract:

Spatially resolved interference is observed between high-order harmonics generated in two longitudinally separated gas targets. High-contrast modulations in the intensity of each harmonic order up to the cutoff are observed on-axis in the far field of the source as the separation between the gas targets is increased. For low-order harmonics, additional off-axis modulations are observed, which are attributed to the interference between the contributions from the long quantum trajectories from each gas target. The inherent synchronization of this setup offers the prospect for high-stability metrology of quantum states with ultrafast temporal resolutions.