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Ion motion effects on the generation of short-cycle relativistic laser pulses during radiation pressure acceleration

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 April 2014

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Abstract

The effects of ion motion on the generation of short-cycle relativistic laser pulses during radiation pressure acceleration are investigated by analytical modeling and particle-in-cell simulations. Studies show that the rear part of the transmitted pulse modulated by ion motion is sharper compared with the case of the electron shutter only. In this study, the ions further modulate the short-cycle pulses transmitted. A 3.9 fs laser pulse with an intensity of $1.33\times 10^{21}\ {\rm W}\ {\rm cm}^{-2}$ is generated by properly controlling the motions of the electron and ion in the simulations. The short-cycle laser pulse source proposed can be applied in the generation of single attosecond pulses and electron acceleration in a small bubble regime.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
The online version of this article is published within an Open Access environment subject to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution licence .
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2014
Figure 0

Figure 1. Scheme for generating nearly single-cycle laser pulses. The incident pulse irradiates a thin foil, producing an ultra-short transmitted pulse and a reflected pulse. Electrostatic fields $E_{x1}$ (green dashed line) and $E_{x2}$ (green dotted line) are produced at both sides of the surface (at $x=d$) of the CEL (red solid line) at the initial stage of the interaction. Ions (blue solid line) remain at rest. The distribution of the electrons corresponds to the case where the CEL just reaches the back side of the target. The CEL then oscillates and disperses, as shown in Figures 2c and 2d.

Figure 1

Figure 2. 1D PIC simulation results for $a_0/t_{{\rm up}}=7.35$ ($a_0=30$ and $t_{{\rm up}}=4.08T_0$), $n_0=8n_c$, and $l_0=1.03\lambda $. (a) Electron and proton trajectories and their density peaks versus time. (b) Laser profile (blue solid line) and charge density of electrons (black solid line) and ions (red solid line) at $t=40T_0$ for the case of moving ions. (c) Electron and proton trajectories and (d) laser profile (blue solid line) and charge density of electrons (black solid line) and ions (red solid line) at $t=40T_0$ for the case of ions at rest.

Figure 2

Figure 3. (a) Amplitude peak $a_t$ (black square) and duration (blue triangle) of transmitted pulses versus foil thickness $l_0$. For the incident laser, $a_0/t_{{\rm up}}=7.35$ ($a_0=30$ and $t_{{\rm up}}=4.08T_0$). The foil density is $n_0=8n_c$. Laser profile (blue solid line) and charge density of electrons (black solid line) and ions (red solid line) for $a_0/t_{{\rm up}}=7.35$ ($a_0=40.4$ and $t_{{\rm up}}=5.5T_0$) and (b) $l_0=1.32\lambda $, (c) $1.2\lambda $.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Laser profile $E_y$ (blue solid line) and charge density of electrons (black solid line) and ${\rm C}^{6+}$ ions (red solid line) for $a_0/t_{{\rm up}}=15$ ($a_0=80$ and $t_{{\rm up}}=6T_0$). The foil density is $n_0=15n_c$, and the foil thickness is $l_0=1.25\lambda $.

Figure 4

Figure 5. Electron (red circle) and ion (blue circle) distribution and the laser profiles in the ($x$, $y$) plane for foils with $n_0=8n_c$ and $l_0=1.03$ irradiated by CP laser pulses with $a_0/t_{{\rm up}}=7.35$ ($a_0=30$ and $t_{{\rm up}}=4.08T_0$) at $t=40T_0$. The axial laser profiles at $y=0$ are denoted by the black solid lines.