DocumentCode
1399169
Title
Absorption of ultrashort, ultra-intense laser light by solids and overdense plasmas
Author
Wilks, Scott C. ; Kruer, William L.
Author_Institution
Lawrence Livermore Nat. Lab., California Univ., CA, USA
Volume
33
Issue
11
fYear
1997
fDate
11/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1954
Lastpage
1968
Abstract
Absorption mechanisms for ultra-intense (I>1017 W/cm 2) laser pulses incident on solids and overdense plasma slabs are discussed. We focus on the ultrashort pulse regime, i.e., where the laser pulse length is only a few to perhaps thousands of femtoseconds. Starting from well-known results at low intensity and long pulse length, we begin with absorption mechanisms such as inverse Bremstrahlung and classical resonance absorption and survey several additional absorption mechanisms significant for ultrashort, ultra-intense laser light interacting with overdense plasmas. Estimates for the fraction of laser energy absorbed by various mechanisms are given. It is found that the fraction of energy absorbed by the plasma, and the resulting electron temperatures, can depend considerably on the scale length of the plasma at the critical surface. It is also found that two-dimensional (2-D) effects greatly increase the amount of absorption into hot electrons, over the amount predicted using one-dimensional (1-D) theory. The inclusion of kinetic effects, collisionless absorption, and multidimensional effects are crucial to obtaining a complete picture of the interaction. We also review some of the experimental efforts to understand this complex process of absorption
Keywords
bremsstrahlung; high-speed optical techniques; laser beam effects; plasma kinetic theory; plasma light propagation; plasma production by laser; plasma temperature; absorption mechanisms; classical resonance absorption; critical surface; electron temperatures; hot electrons; inverse Bremstrahlung; kinetic effects; laser pulse length; multidimensional effects; one-dimensional theory; overdense plasmas; scale length; solids; two-dimensional effects; ultrashort pulse regime; ultrashort ultra-intense laser; Absorption; Electrons; Kinetic theory; Optical pulses; Plasma temperature; Resonance; Slabs; Solid lasers; Temperature dependence; Two dimensional displays;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Quantum Electronics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9197
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/3.641310
Filename
641310
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