Guided electromagnetic discharge pulses driven by short intense laser pulses: Characterization and modeling

M. Ehret*, M. Bailly-Grandvaux, Ph. Korneev, J.I. Apiñaniz, C. Brabetz, A. Morace, P. Bradford, E. D'Humières, G. Schaumann, V. Bagnoud, S. Malko, K. Matveevskii, M. Roth, L. Volpe, N.C. Woolsey, J.J. Santos

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Strong electromagnetic pulses (EMPs) are generated from intense laser interactions with solid-density targets and can be guided by the target geometry, specifically through conductive connections to the ground. We present an experimental characterization by time- and spatial-resolved proton deflectometry of guided electromagnetic discharge pulses along wires including a coil, driven by 0.5 ps, 50 J, 1019 W/cm2 laser pulses. Proton-deflectometry allows us to time-resolve first the EMP due to the laser-driven target charging and then the return EMP from the ground through the conductive target stalk. Both EMPs have a typical duration of tens of ps and correspond to currents in the kA-range with electric-field amplitudes of multiple GV/m. The sub-mm coil in the target rod creates lensing effects on probing protons due to both magnetic- and electric-field contributions. This way, protons of the 10 MeV-energy range are focused over cm-scale distances. Experimental results are supported by analytical modeling and high-resolution numerical particle-in-cell simulations, unraveling the likely presence of a surface plasma, in which parameters define the discharge pulse dispersion in the non-linear propagation regime.

Original languageEnglish
Article number013105
JournalPhysics of plasmas
Volume30
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2023

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