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Plasma devices to guide and collimate a high density of MeV electrons.

Authors :
Kodama R
Sentoku Y
Chen ZL
Kumar GR
Hatchett SP
Toyama Y
Cowan TE
Freeman RR
Fuchs J
Izawa Y
Key MH
Kitagawa Y
Kondo K
Matsuoka T
Nakamura H
Nakatsutsumi M
Norreys PA
Norimatsu T
Snavely RA
Stephens RB
Tampo M
Tanaka KA
Yabuuchi T
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2004 Dec 23; Vol. 432 (7020), pp. 1005-8.
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

The development of ultra-intense lasers has facilitated new studies in laboratory astrophysics and high-density nuclear science, including laser fusion. Such research relies on the efficient generation of enormous numbers of high-energy charged particles. For example, laser-matter interactions at petawatt (10(15) W) power levels can create pulses of MeV electrons with current densities as large as 10(12) A cm(-2). However, the divergence of these particle beams usually reduces the current density to a few times 10(6) A cm(-2) at distances of the order of centimetres from the source. The invention of devices that can direct such intense, pulsed energetic beams will revolutionize their applications. Here we report high-conductivity devices consisting of transient plasmas that increase the energy density of MeV electrons generated in laser-matter interactions by more than one order of magnitude. A plasma fibre created on a hollow-cone target guides and collimates electrons in a manner akin to the control of light by an optical fibre and collimator. Such plasma devices hold promise for applications using high energy-density particles and should trigger growth in charged particle optics.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
432
Issue :
7020
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
15616556
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature03133