MeV proton acceleration at kHz repetition rate from ultra-intense laser liquid interaction

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Abstract

Laser acceleration of ions to ≳MeV energies has been achieved on a variety of Petawatt laser systems, raising the prospect of ion beam applications using compact ultra-intense laser technology. However, translation from proof-of-concept laser experiment into real-world application requires MeV-scale ion energies and an appreciable repetition rate (>Hz). We demonstrate, for the first time, proton acceleration up to 2 MeV energies at a kHz repetition rate using a milli-joule-class short-pulse laser system. In these experiments, 5 mJ of ultrashort-pulse laser energy is delivered at an intensity near onto a thin-sheet, liquid-density target. Key to this effort is a flowing liquid ethylene glycol target formed in vacuum with thicknesses down to 400 nm and full recovery at 70 μs, suggesting its potential use at ≫kHz rate. Novel detectors and experimental methods tailored to high-repetition-rate ion acceleration by lasers were essential to this study and are described. In addition, particle-in-cell simulations of the laser-plasma interaction show good agreement with experimental observations.

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Morrison, J. T., Feister, S., Frische, K. D., Austin, D. R., Ngirmang, G. K., Murphy, N. R., … Roquemore, W. M. (2018). MeV proton acceleration at kHz repetition rate from ultra-intense laser liquid interaction. New Journal of Physics, 20(2). https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/aaa8d1

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