Title :
Guided electric discharges induced by femtosecond laser filaments
Author :
Ting, A. ; Gordon, D.F. ; Hubbard, R.F. ; Briscoe, E. ; Jones, T. ; Manka, C. ; Slinker, S.P. ; Baronavski, A.P. ; Ladouceur, H.D. ; Grounds, P.W. ; Girardi, P.G. ; Speangle, P.
Author_Institution :
Div. of Plasma Phys., Naval Res. Lab., Washington, DC, USA
Abstract :
Summary form only given. The time evolution of electrical discharges induced and guided between the cathode of a 200 kV Van de Graf generator and a ground sphere was studied using a 100 fs Ti:sapphire laser. Nonlinear focusing and ionization effects produce optical and plasma filaments in the discharge region. Streak camera images often exhibit streamers that propagate towards the cathode, but sudden discharge triggering is frequently observed with no streamer precursors. The typical discharge triggering delay time was measured to be 150 ns. Similar time delays were obtained from an air chemistry code used to model the long time behavior of the plasma induced by the short laser pulse including the external electric field. The model shows that ohmic heating of the filament plasma persists over long time scales and inhibits the decay of electron density due to recombination and attachment processes. Eventually the rise in electron temperature causes the avalanche rate to increase to the point where breakdown occurs. The hydrodynamic density reduction process reported by Tzortzakis, et al. is also taken into consideration. Its main effect is found to be a hastening of the breakdown process.
Keywords :
discharges (electric); plasma density; plasma ohmic heating; plasma production by laser; plasma transport processes; 100 fs; 150 ns; 200 kV; Ti:sapphire laser; Van de Graf generator; air chemistry code; breakdown process; cathode; discharge region; electron attachment processes; electron density; electron recombination; electron temperature; external electric field; femtosecond laser filaments; filament plasma persists; guided electric discharges; hastening; hydrodynamic density reduction process; ionization effects; laser pulse; nonlinear focusing; ohmic heating; optical filaments; plasma filaments; streak camera images; Cathodes; Delay effects; Electrons; Focusing; Plasma chemistry; Plasma density; Plasma measurements; Plasma temperature; Streaming media; Ultrafast optics;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science, 2004. ICOPS 2004. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts. The 31st IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Baltimore, MD, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8334-6
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.2004.1339899