Hauptseite > Publikationsdatenbank > Dominance of Radiation Pressure in Ion Acceleration with Linearly Polarized Pulses at Intensities of 1021 W cm-2 |
Journal Article | PreJuSER-20325 |
; ; ; ; ;
2012
APS
College Park, Md.
This record in other databases:
Please use a persistent id in citations: http://hdl.handle.net/2128/7439 doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.115002
Abstract: A novel regime is proposed where, by employing linearly polarized laser pulses at intensities 10(21) W cm(-2) (2 orders of magnitude lower than discussed in previous work [T. Esirkepov et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 175003 (2004)]), ions are dominantly accelerated from ultrathin foils by the radiation pressure and have monoenergetic spectra. In this regime, ions accelerated from the hole-boring process quickly catch up with the ions accelerated by target normal sheath acceleration, and they then join in a single bunch, undergoing a hybrid light-sail-target normal sheath acceleration. Under an appropriate coupling condition between foil thickness, laser intensity, and pulse duration, laser radiation pressure can be dominant in this hybrid acceleration. Two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations show that 1.26 GeV quasimonoenergetic C6+ beams are obtained by linearly polarized laser pulses at intensities of 10(21) W cm(-2).
Keyword(s): J
![]() |
The record appears in these collections: |