Author: Dudnikova, G.
Paper Title Page
THPS013 Radiation Pressure Acceleration of Multi-ion Thin Foil 3448
 
  • T.-C. Liu, G. Dudnikova, M.Q. He, C.-S. Liu, R.Z. Sagdeev, X. Shao, J.-J. Su
    UMD, College Park, Maryland, USA
 
  Radiation pressure acceleration (RPA) is considered as an efficient way to produce quasi-monoenergetic ions, in which an ultra-thin foil is accelerated by high intensity circularly polarized laser. Our simulation study shows that an important factor limiting this acceleration process is the Rayleigh-Taylor instability, which results in the exponential growth of the foil density perturbation during the acceleration and hence the induced transparency of the foil and broadening of the particle energy spectrum. We will study RPA of multi-ion thin foil made of carbon and hydrogen and investigate the possibility of using abundant electrons supplied from carbon to delay the foil from becoming transparent, enhance the acceleration of protons and therefore improve the energy of quasi-monoenergetic proton beam. We will show the dependence of the energy of quasi-monoenergetic proton and carbon beam on the density and concentration ratio of carbon and hydrogen in the foil as well as foil thickness for RPA.  
 
THPS014 Laser Thin Gas Target Acceleration for Quasi-monoenergetic Proton Generation 3451
 
  • M.Q. He, G. Dudnikova, C.-S. Liu, T.-C. Liu, R.Z. Sagdeev, X. Shao, J.-J. Su
    UMD, College Park, Maryland, USA
  • Z.M. Sheng
    Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, People's Republic of China
 
  We propose a scheme of laser thin gas target acceleration for quasi-monoenergetic proton generation. The scheme uses gas target of thickness about several laser wavelengths with gas density spatial distribution of Guassian or square of sine shape. We performed Particle-In-Cell simulation using circularly polarized laser of normalized maximum amplitude ~5 and hydrogen gas target of thickness ~5 laser wavelength with peak density three times of the critical density. The simulation demonstrates several key physical processes involved in the laser thin gas target acceleration and the observation of quasi-monoenergetic protons. During the early phase of the laser plasma interaction, electron and ion cavities are observed. A compressed plasma layer is formed. The reflected protons in front of the compressed layer are accelerated and thus a bunch of quasi-monoenergetic protons are obtained. The compressed layer is finally destroyed due to Rayleigh-Taylor instability. The acceleration of the quasi-monoenergetic proton then stops with maximum energy about 8 MeV. It is also found that gas target thickness plays an important role for efficient quasi-monoenergetic proton generation.