Title :
e-PLAS Analysis of Short Pulse Laser-Matter Interaction Experiments
Author :
Mason, R.J. ; Wei, M. ; Beg, F. ; Stephens, R.B. ; Snell, C.M.
Author_Institution :
Res. Applications Corp., Los Alamos
Abstract :
Summary form only given. The transport of relativistic electrons generated in wire and foil targets by short-pulse lasers is examined with the new e-PLAS simulation code base on implicit-moment/hybrid techniques. In a 40 mum diameter Cu wire (Zeff = 15) as recently illuminated on the TITAN LLNL laser, for example, a 1.7times10-20 W/cm2 laser beam delivering a flat 30 mum spot from the left (with 40 % absorption) generates the hot electron density profile depicted below at 940 fs. The peak hot density in the laser spot is ~3times1021 electrons/cm3. This density drops to 3times1019 electrons/cm3 200 microns into the wire. A peak temperature of 2 keV is achieved through Joule heating of the background electrons in the wire "head" near the deposition surface. Here, 300 MG thermoelectric B-fields are also calculated. Parameter studies relate the hot electron stopping to the surface B-field, modest drag slowing, and the background cold electron resistivity, which is bleached by background heating to low values at late times.
Keywords :
copper; electron density; laser beam effects; relativistic electron beams; Joule heating; TITAN LLNL laser; background cold electron resistivity; background heating; e-PLAS simulation code; foil targets; hot electron density profile; hot electron stopping; laser spot; relativistic electron transport; short pulse laser-matter interaction; size 30 mum; size 40 mum; surface B-field; wire targets; Absorption; Drag; Electron beams; Heating; Hybrid power systems; Laser beams; Optical pulses; Temperature; Thermoelectricity; Wire;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science, 2007. ICOPS 2007. IEEE 34th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Albuquerque, NM
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-0915-0
DOI :
10.1109/PPPS.2007.4346127