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High-power non-perturbative laser delivery diagnostics at the final focus of 100-TW-class laser pulses

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 May 2021

Fumika Isono*
Affiliation:
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA
Jeroen van Tilborg
Affiliation:
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
Samuel K. Barber
Affiliation:
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
Joseph Natal
Affiliation:
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA
Curtis Berger
Affiliation:
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA
Hai-En Tsai
Affiliation:
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
Tobias Ostermayr
Affiliation:
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
Anthony Gonsalves
Affiliation:
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
Cameron Geddes
Affiliation:
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
Eric Esarey
Affiliation:
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, USA
*
Correspondence to: J. van Tilborg, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA. Email: JvanTilborg@lbl.gov

Abstract

Controlling the delivery of multi-terawatt and petawatt laser pulses to final focus, both in position and angle, is critical to many laser applications such as optical guiding, laser–plasma acceleration, and laser-produced secondary radiation. We present an online, non-destructive laser diagnostic, capable of measuring the transverse position and pointing angle at focus. The diagnostic is based on a unique double-surface-coated wedged-mirror design for the final steering optic in the laser line, producing a witness beam highly correlated with the main beam. By propagating low-power kilohertz pulses to focus, we observed spectra of focus position and pointing angle fluctuations dominated by frequencies below 70 Hz. The setup was also used to characterize the excellent position and pointing angle correlation of the 1 Hz high-power laser pulses to this low-power kilohertz pulse train, opening a promising path to fast non-perturbative feedback concepts even on few-hertz-class high-power laser systems.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press in association with Chinese Laser Press
Figure 0

Figure 1 Experimental setup of the 100-TW-class laser system. A 1 kHz, 800 nm, 35 fs laser pulse train is produced in the regenerative amplifier (Regen) and stretched to 300 ps, and then every one in a thousand pulses is amplified in three successive multi-pass bow-tie amplifiers (Amp 2, 3, and 4). A single commercial pump laser (532 nm, ~16 ns pulse duration) is routed to all three amplifier Ti:sapphire crystals with 1 Hz repetition rate. The laser pulses are then compressed to 35 fs and focused into the target chamber, where a gas jet is placed for LPA experiments. The laser mode at focus is measured with two diagnostics: (1) a common mode imager (after insertion of the retractable wedge) with camera 1 recording the far-field laser profile by imaging the target chamber focus plane; and (2) a correlated witness beam setup, where a back-surface-reflected final steering mirror is routing a correlated copy of the main beam to a setup measuring the laser’s far-field (camera 2, imaging the target chamber focus plane) and quasi-near-field (camera 3, imaging a plane 44 mm downstream of the target chamber focus). The near-field beam profile at the off-axis parabolic mirror (OAP) surface is recorded by camera 4. Gray boxes represent vacuum chambers.

Figure 1

Figure 2 A single-shot transverse mode profile of the amplified beam captured by (a) camera 1 (mode imager) and (b) camera 2 (witness beam). (c), (d) Correlation of 100 consecutive high-power shots (at 1 Hz) of the main beam and witness beam centroids in horizontal and vertical direction, respectively.

Figure 2

Figure 3 (a), (b) Time series of 1 kHz non-amplified beam centroids in horizontal and vertical directions measured with far-field witness beam camera 2. The inset displays a zoomed-in sub-set of the first 500 shots. (c), (d) The amplitude $\mid 2I(f)/N\mid$ of the discrete Fourier transform $I(f)$ of the time series (a) and (b), respectively, with N = 100,000 the number of samples. In addition to sub-hertz drifts, several peaks in the fluctuation spectrum can be observed between 10 and 100 Hz.

Figure 3

Figure 4 (a), (b) Time series of 1 kHz non-amplified beam pointing angle at focus in horizontal and vertical directions, derived from the far-field mode captured by camera 2 and the near-field mode captured by camera 3. (c), (d) The amplitude $\mid 2I(f)/N\mid$ of the discrete Fourier transform $I(f)$ of the time series (a) and (b), respectively, highlighting the dominant components below 10 Hz.

Figure 4

Figure 5 The standard deviation ${\sigma}^{\ast }$ of (a) the centroid fluctuations and (b) the angle fluctuations, with only frequencies above ${f}_{\mathrm{cutoff}}$ included in the standard deviation calculation. This representation of the spectral content is a complimentary way to interpret the Fourier transforms of the time series in Figures 3 and 4.

Figure 5

Figure 6 (a) Illustration of the main beam and the witness beam timing with respect to the camera capture exposure. The example shows the $\Delta {t}_{\mathrm{cam}}=1$ ms case when camera 1 (mode imager) captures the 1 Hz amplified main beam, whereas camera 2 captures the non-amplified pulse 1 ms earlier. (b) Correlation coefficients $\rho$ derived from the beam centroids measured with cameras 1 and 2, both for $\Delta {t}_{\mathrm{cam}}=0$ ms (blue bars) and $\Delta {t}_{\mathrm{cam}}=1$ ms (orange bars). We observe no significant degradation in $\rho$ at $\Delta {t}_{\mathrm{cam}}=1$ ms, indicating that the main pulse has not picked up a random centroid fluctuation during the amplification process.

Figure 6

Figure 7 (a) Correlations of the main beam centroid at the OAP surface as captured with camera 4, and the pointing angle at focus captured with cameras 2 and 3 (witness beam diagnostic). Camera 4 always captured the main (high-power) 1 Hz pulses, whereas cameras 2 and 3 captured either the same pulse at $\Delta {t}_{\mathrm{cam}}=0$ ms or the non-amplified pulse 1 ms earlier at $\Delta {t}_{\mathrm{cam}}=1$ ms. (b) Correlation coefficients $\rho$ for the plots in (a), showing that there are no significant differences in $\rho$ between $\Delta {t}_{\mathrm{cam}}=0$ ms and $\Delta {t}_{\mathrm{cam}}=1$ ms, supporting the claim that the amplification process does not impart significant random fluctuations in the target-chamber laser axis angle.