Formation of collisionless shocks driven by strongly magnetized relativistic electrons in the laboratory

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Abstract

In experiments performed with the OMEGA EP laser system, proton deflectometry captured magnetic field dynamics consistent with collisionless shock formation driven by strongly magnetized relativistic electrons. During laser-foil interactions, shocks can form as relativistic electrons and strong surface magnetic fields generated by a short-pulse laser impinge on a cooler plasma produced by a longer-pulse laser. Three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations reproduce the magnetic draping and fast formation speeds measured in the experiment and reveal that this relativistic-electron-driven shock forms at an interface that is unstable to shear and streaming instabilities. The simulation results provide insight into the microphysics that may influence high-energy shocks observed in extreme astrophysical environments.

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Campbell, P. T., Russell, B. K., Dong, C., Fiksel, G., Nilson, P. M., Thomas, A. G. R., … Willingale, L. (2024). Formation of collisionless shocks driven by strongly magnetized relativistic electrons in the laboratory. Physical Review Research, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.6.L012016

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