Laser-driven shock acceleration of ions in collisional and ultra-relativistic regime
by
MsShikha Bhadoria
(Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics)
→
Europe/Berlin
KBW Lecture Hall - Side Room (GSI)
KBW Lecture Hall - Side Room
GSI
Description
The effect of collisions and quantum electrodynamic effects like radiation reaction and pair production on shock formation and subsequent ion acceleration from laser-plasma interaction are explored by means of particle-in-cell simulations. In this setup, the incident laser pushes the laser-plasma interface inside the plasma target through the hole-boring effect and generates hot electrons. The propagation of these hot electrons inside the target excites a return plasma current, leading to filamentary structures caused by the Weibel/filamentation instability. The collisional weakening of the space-charge effects results in the formation of a shock with a higher density jump than in a collisionless plasma. This stronger shock leads to stable quasi-monoenergetic acceleration of ions. In the ultra-relativistic regime, both radiation reaction and pair plasma formation tend to slow down the shock velocity which makes the quasi-monoenergetic ion acceleration lasting on longer timescales.