17–23 Sept 2023
Hotel Hermitage, La Biodola Bay, Isola d'Elba, Italy
Europe/Rome timezone

The Interaction of Intense Light with Wavelength-Scale Objects

19 Sept 2023, 17:05
20m
Aula Maria Luisa (Hotel Hermitage)

Aula Maria Luisa

Hotel Hermitage

Oral contribution WG1: Plasma-based accelerators and ancillary components WG1:Plasma-based accelerators and ancillary components

Speaker

Ishay Pomerantz

Description

Intense laser fields interact very differently with micrometric rough surfaces than with flat objects. The interaction features high laser energy absorption and increased emission of MeV electrons, ions, and of hard x-rays.
I will report on how we revealed the underlying reason for this phenomenon by irradiating isolated, micrometric, translationally-symmetric objects by 20 TW laser pulses. The interaction resulted in the emission of two forward-directed electron jets having a small opening angle, a narrow energy spread in the MeV range.
PIC simulations show that electrons that are ionized and pulled into vacuum through the vacuum heating mechanism near the edge of the object, manage to circumvent it because of the combined action of the transverse electric field and their cyclotron motion under the magnetic field of the laser. Then, after they pass the object, the electrons form attosecond duration bunches and interact with the laser field over large distances in vacuum. The diffraction of the laser fields obscured by the target creates confined volumes that trap and accelerate electrons within a narrow range of initial momentum. The preservation of the attosecond duration of the electron bunches over large distances, may be applied to the design of future laser-based light sources.

Primary authors

Prof. Alexey Arefiev (UC San Diego) Dr Assaf Levanon (Tel-Aviv University) Dr David Blackman (UC San Diego) Ishay Pomerantz Mr Itamar Cohen (Tel-Aviv University) Dr Lior Perelmutter (Tel-Aviv University) Ms Michal Elkind (Tel-Aviv University) Prof. Siegfried Glenzer (SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory) Ms Talia Meir (Tel-Aviv University) Mr Tomer Catabi (Tel-Aviv University)

Presentation materials