Bulletin of the American Physical Society
60th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 63, Number 11
Monday–Friday, November 5–9, 2018; Portland, Oregon
Session TO8: Plasma Acceleration: Computation, Beam Driven, Mid-IR lasers
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Thursday, November 8, 2018
OCC
Room: C120-122
Chair: Jessica Shaw, Laboratory for Laser Energetics, Rochester, NY
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.DPP.TO8.11
Abstract: TO8.00011 : Numerical study of long CO2 laser pulse interactions with hydrogen plasma at ATF*
11:30 AM–11:42 AM
Presenter:
Ligia Diana Amorim
(State Univ of NY - Stony Brook)
Authors:
Navid Vafaei-Najafabadi
(State Univ of NY - Stony Brook)
Ligia Diana Amorim
(State Univ of NY - Stony Brook)
Jiayang Yan
(State Univ of NY - Stony Brook)
Pietro Iapozzuto
(State Univ of NY - Stony Brook)
Mael Flament
(State Univ of NY - Stony Brook)
Yichao Jing
(Brookhaven Natl Lab)
Vladimir N Litvinenko
(State Univ of NY - Stony Brook)
Roman V. Samulyak
(State Univ of NY - Stony Brook)
Prabhat Kumar
(State Univ of NY - Stony Brook)
Igor Pogorelsky
(Brookhaven Natl Lab)
Christina Swinson
(Brookhaven Natl Lab)
Marcus Babzien
(Brookhaven Natl Lab)
Karl Kusche
(Brookhaven Natl Lab)
Mikhail Polyanskiy
(Brookhaven Natl Lab)
Mikhail Fedurin
(Brookhaven Natl Lab)
Mark A Palmer
(Brookhaven Natl Lab)
Rafal Zgadzaj
(Univ of Texas, Austin)
James R Welch
(Univ of Texas, Austin)
Michael C Downer
(Univ of Texas, Austin)
Chan Joshi
(Univ of California - Los Angeles)
Warren B Mori
(Univ of California - Los Angeles)
Wei Lu
(Tsinghua Univ)
Laser-driven plasma Wakefield Accelerators (LWFAs) can sustain accelerating gradients that greatly surpass those of standard accelerators. Long (~ps) and intense (>TW) laser pulses have been employed in LWFAs to generate bright, hard x-rays which are of interest for imaging and diagnosing warm-dense matter. We explore the LWFA regime using a long TW class CO2 (~10.6µm) laser to excite wakefields in a hydrogen plasma in the experiment AE71 at the ATF facility of the Brookhaven National Laboratory. In that experiment, the laser encompasses hundreds of plasma skin depths allowing for three different regimes of laser and plasma interaction: laser self-modulation, laser disruption along with transversely spread out plasma bubbles and laser self-channeling. In this talk, numerical results will be presented to show the main properties of those laser and plasma interactions for different configurations experimentally tested as well as the effects imprinted on the frequency-doubled Nd:YAG and electron beam probes. The simulations were done using the Particle in Cell code OSIRIS [R.A.Fonseca, LNCS (2331) 342, 2002].
*Acknowledging funding from DOE Grant No. 215125 and resources of NERSC facility, operated under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231, and SEAWULF cluster at Stony Brook University.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.DPP.TO8.11
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