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1.
Opt Express ; 25(3): 1958-1972, 2017 Feb 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29519045

ABSTRACT

By analyzing profiles of experimental x-ray spectral lines of Si XIV and Al XIII, we found that both Langmuir and ion acoustic waves developed in plasmas produced via irradiation of thin Si foils by relativistic laser pulses (intensities ~1021 W/cm2). We prove that these waves are due to the parametric decay instability (PDI). This is the first time that the PDI-induced ion acoustic turbulence was discovered by the x-ray spectroscopy in laser-produced plasmas. These conclusions are also supported by PIC simulations. Our results can be used for laboratory modeling of physical processes in astrophysical objects and a better understanding of intense laser-plasma interactions.

2.
Sci Rep ; 5: 13436, 2015 Sep 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26330230

ABSTRACT

We report, for the first time, that the energy of femtosecond optical laser pulses, E, with relativistic intensities I > 10(21) W/cm(2) is efficiently converted to X-ray radiation, which is emitted by "hot" electron component in collision-less processes and heats the solid density plasma periphery. As shown by direct high-resolution spectroscopic measurements X-ray radiation from plasma periphery exhibits unusual non-linear growth ~E(4-5) of its power. The non-linear power growth occurs far earlier than the known regime when the radiation reaction dominates particle motion (RDR). Nevertheless, the radiation is shown to dominate the kinetics of the plasma periphery, changing in this regime (now labeled RDKR) the physical picture of the laser plasma interaction. Although in the experiments reported here we demonstrated by observation of KK hollow ions that X-ray intensities in the keV range exceeds ~10(17) W/cm(2), there is no theoretical limit of the radiation power. Therefore, such powerful X-ray sources can produce and probe exotic material states with high densities and multiple inner-shell electron excitations even for higher Z elements. Femtosecond laser-produced plasmas may thus provide unique ultra-bright X-ray sources, for future studies of matter in extreme conditions, material science studies, and radiography of biological systems.

3.
Radiats Biol Radioecol ; 53(2): 170-82, 2013.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23786031

ABSTRACT

Structural elements of the central nervous system--neurons, along with the higher neuroendocrine structures and the hypothalamus centres, show high sensitivity to a chronic action of low doses of ionizing radiation (IR) in view of their extreme enrichment by phospholipids and intensive supply by oxygen, creating favorable conditions for the development of oxidizing stress. Stressful influences cause negative emotions in the behaviour of animals manifested as fear or uneasiness. The study represents the results of comparative research into the behavioral reactions characterized by uneasiness in the Balb/c and C57bl/6 mice exposed to a chronic irradiation at low doses. The chitin-melanin-glucan complex from fungi Fomes fomentarius (ChMG) was approved as an adaptive agent. It has been shown that under identical conditions, deposition levels of radionuclides 137Cs and 90Sr are raised in mice with IR hypersensitivity--line Balb/c, in comparison with less radio sensitive mice--line C57bl/6. Simultaneously, Balb/c mice were observed to exhibit the signs of a more anxious behaviour in the new environment. Chronic external and internal radiation exposure to rare ionizing radiation at low doses promotes strengthening of anxiety and phobic reactions in mice with IR hypersensitivity. The use of ChMG in animals neutralized the increase in anxiety and phobic reactions after a prolonged irradiation, thus indicating the presence in ChMG of the anxiolitic activity along with the above mentioned powerful radiosorbent, antioxidant, gene protective and immunomodulatory properties.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/radiation effects , Fear , Radiation Tolerance/genetics , Radiation, Ionizing , Radiation-Protective Agents/administration & dosage , Animals , Biopolymers/administration & dosage , Biopolymers/chemistry , Chitin/administration & dosage , Chitin/chemistry , Fear/drug effects , Fear/radiation effects , Macromolecular Substances/administration & dosage , Melanins/administration & dosage , Melanins/chemistry , Mice , Radiation Dosage , Radiation Tolerance/drug effects , Radiation-Protective Agents/chemistry
4.
Radiats Biol Radioecol ; 53(1): 33-46, 2013.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23700833

ABSTRACT

The search results of "bystander" signals are presented at different model of influence of IR on Balb/c and C57bl/6 mice, characterized by different levels of genetically determined sensitivity to IR influence. We used the following models of IR influence: 1) external gamma-quanta influence from small samples of nuclear fuel from the CNPP 4th power unit modified in the course of the accident in 1986, which are 99% connected with 137Cs, with the total dose of irradiation of about 5.0 Gy for 16 hours and accumulated dose of 0.290 Gy for 231 day of exposure, 2) internal intake of 137Cs with water for 40 days. It is shown that cells of different types (splenocytes, hepatocytes, bone marrow and astroglia cells) irrespective of a model of IR influence produce the factors, which failed to be identified in this research, raising the SSF levels in the DNA of non-irradiated cells. Under conditions of a single exposure to gamma-field external irradiation at a dose of about 5.0 Gy, the intensity of production of "bystander" signals is higher in the mice with the raised level of genetically determined sensitivity to RI (Balb/c). Under the same conditions of gamma-field exposure, induction of additional levels of SSF in the DNA of non-irradiated cells is detected for at least one month after IR exposure. Intraperitoneal injection of melanin in the melanin-glucan complex from fungus F. fomentarius before irradiation exposure promotes an essential decrease in the production of "bystander" signals, testifying in favor of the free radical nature of their certain part.


Subject(s)
Bystander Effect/genetics , Chernobyl Nuclear Accident , DNA/radiation effects , Radiation Tolerance , Animals , Astrocytes/cytology , Astrocytes/drug effects , Astrocytes/radiation effects , Blood Cells/drug effects , Blood Cells/radiation effects , Cesium Radioisotopes/toxicity , Extracellular Space/drug effects , Extracellular Space/radiation effects , Gamma Rays , Liver/cytology , Liver/drug effects , Liver/radiation effects , Male , Melanins/administration & dosage , Mice , Mutation/radiation effects , Radiation Tolerance/genetics , Radiation Tolerance/physiology , Radiation Tolerance/radiation effects , Radiation-Protective Agents/administration & dosage , Spleen/cytology , Spleen/drug effects , Spleen/radiation effects , Ukraine , Whole-Body Irradiation
5.
Phys Rev Lett ; 110(12): 125001, 2013 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25166812

ABSTRACT

In high-spectral resolution experiments with the petawatt Vulcan laser, strong x-ray radiation of KK hollow atoms (atoms without n = 1 electrons) from thin Al foils was observed at pulse intensities of 3 × 10(20) W/cm(2). The observations of spectra from these exotic states of matter are supported by detailed kinetics calculations, and are consistent with a picture in which an intense polychromatic x-ray field, formed from Thomson scattering and bremsstrahlung in the electrostatic fields at the target surface, drives the KK hollow atom production. We estimate that this x-ray field has an intensity of >5 × 10(18) W/cm(2) and is in the 3 keV range.

6.
Opt Lett ; 37(6): 1130-2, 2012 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22446248

ABSTRACT

Strong hard (ε>100 keV) x rays being observed from impulse atmospheric discharges with maximal voltages from U=0.5 to 0.9 MV just before the breakdown were completely stopped with the use of femtosecond-laser-filament plasma. Runaway electrons generating such x rays and being estimated to achieve their maximal energy, ε~U, near the positive electrode disappear if a laser filament plasma is ignited perpendicularly to the runaway near the positive electrode. A preheating mechanism for formation of the electron runaway in air is proposed.

7.
Opt Lett ; 34(19): 2964-6, 2009 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19794783

ABSTRACT

Femtosecond laser pulses were used to make plasma filaments near an isolated positively or negatively highly biased electrode. The electrode was well positioned to sustain a high voltage up to U(max)=+/-400 kV to avoid the induced breakdown or a glow discharge; the shape of the electrode was chosen to reduce the corona effects at the maximal voltage. The filament's UV emission is shown to be very sensitive to the voltage applied: it increases nonlinearly with the electrode potential. Along with nanosecond filament-induced flashes at both polarities, long, about a half microsecond, corona flashes were observed at the negative polarity.

8.
Phys Rev Lett ; 103(2): 025002, 2009 Jul 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19659215

ABSTRACT

An ultrabright high-power x- and gamma-radiation source is proposed. A high-density thin plasma slab, accelerating in the radiation pressure dominant regime by an ultraintense electromagnetic wave, reflects a counterpropagating relativistically strong electromagnetic wave, producing extremely time-compressed and intensified radiation. The reflected light contains relativistic harmonics generated at the plasma slab, all upshifted with the same factor as the fundamental mode of the incident light. The theory of an arbitrarily moving thin plasma slab reflectivity is presented.

9.
Phys Rev Lett ; 103(21): 215003, 2009 Nov 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20366045

ABSTRACT

An optically dense ionization wave (IW) produced by two femtosecond (approximately 10/30 fs) laser pulses focused cylindrically and crossing each other may become an efficient coherent x-ray converter in accordance with the Semenova-Lampe theory. The resulting velocity of a quasiplane IW in the vicinity of pulse intersection changes with the angle between the pulses from the group velocity of ionizing pulses to infinity allowing a tuning of the wavelength of x rays and their bunching. The x-ray spectra after scattering of a lower frequency and long coherent light pulse change from the monochromatic to high order harmoniclike with the duration of the ionizing pulses.

10.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 71(1 Pt 2): 015403, 2005 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15697651

ABSTRACT

We study experimentally the interaction of the shortest at present (23-fs) , relativistically intense (20-TW), tightly focused laser pulses with underdense plasma. MeV electrons constitute a two-temperature distribution due to different plasma wave-breaking processes at a plasma density of 10(20) cm(-3). These two groups of electrons are shown numerically to constitute bunches with very distinctive time durations.

11.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 69(6 Pt 2): 066408, 2004 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15244746

ABSTRACT

Interaction of an ultraintense, a(0) >>1, laser pulse with an underdense Ar plasma is analyzed via a two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulation which self-consistently includes optical-field ionization. In spite of rapid growth of ion charge Z and, hence, electron density at the laser front, relativistic self-focusing is shown to persist owing to a reduction of the expected plasma defocusing resulting from the weak radial dependence of the ion charge on laser intensity (even for Z/gamma>1 where gamma is the electron relativistic factor).

12.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 69(3 Pt 2): 035401, 2004 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15089350

ABSTRACT

The self-injection of plasma electrons which have been accelerated to relativistic energies by a laser pulse moving with a group velocity less than the speed of light with I lambda(2)>5 x 10(19) W microm(2)/cm(2) is found via particle-in-cell simulation to be efficient for laser wake-field acceleration. When the matching condition a(0)> or =(2(1/4)omega/omega(pl))(2/3) is met, the self-injection, along with wave breaking, dominates monoenergetic electron acceleration yielding up to 100 MeV energies by a 100 TW, 20 fs laser pulse. In contrast to the injection due to wave-breaking processes, self-injection allows suppression of production of a Maxwell distribution of accelerated particles and the extraction of a beam-quality bunch of energetic electrons.

13.
Phys Rev Lett ; 91(21): 215001, 2003 Nov 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14683311

ABSTRACT

With detailed experimental studies and hydrodynamics and particle-in-cell simulations we investigate the role of the prepulse in laser proton acceleration. The prepulse or pedestal (amplified spontaneous emission) can completely evaporate the irradiated region of a sufficiently thin foil; therefore, the main part of the laser pulse interacts with an underdense plasma. The multiparametric particle-in-cell simulations demonstrate that the main pulse generates the quasistatic magnetic field, which in its turn produces the long-lived charge separation electrostatic field, accelerating the ions.

14.
Phys Rev Lett ; 89(21): 215002, 2002 Nov 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12443420

ABSTRACT

Acceleration of ions in a solitary wave produced by shock-wave decay in a plasma slab irradiated by an intense picosecond laser pulse is studied via particle-in-cell simulation. Instead of exponential distribution as in known mechanisms of ion acceleration from the target surface, these ions accelerated forwardly form a bunch with relatively low energy spread. The bunch is shown to be a solitary wave moving over expanding plasma; its velocity can exceed the maximal velocity of ions accelerated forward from the rear side of the target.

15.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 66(3 Pt 2B): 036405, 2002 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12366265

ABSTRACT

The light scattered backward from a target illuminated by ultraintense laser pulses carries important information about the nonlinear laser-plasma interaction. We analyze the usefulness of this information by plasma corona analysis with the help of an analytical model we developed, and particle-in-cell simulation. The spectrum of scattered light is shown to be shifted, to be broadened, and to be modulated, in comparison with the initial laser spectrum, and the spectral shift is an indicator of laser pulse contrast ratio.

16.
Phys Rev Lett ; 88(18): 185002, 2002 May 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12005689

ABSTRACT

A strong effect of radiation damping on the interaction of an ultraintense laser pulse with an overdense plasma slab is found and studied via a relativistic particle-in-cell simulation including ionization. Hot electrons generated by the irradiation of a laser pulse with a radiance of I lambda(2)>10(22) W microm(2)/cm(2) and duration of 20 fs can convert more than 35% of the laser energy to radiation. This incoherent x-ray emission lasts for only the pulse duration and can be intense. The radiation efficiency is shown to increase nonlinearly with laser intensity. Similar to cyclotron radiation, the radiation damping may restrain the maximal energy of relativistic electrons in ultraintense-laser-produced plasmas.

17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11102080

ABSTRACT

Kalpha emission of high-Z solid targets irradiated by an intense, short (<100 fs) laser pulse in the 10 keV region is shown to be sensitive to the electron energy cutoff, which is strongly dependent on the density gradient of the plasma corona formed by a long prepulse. The absorption rate of short laser pulses, the hot electron distribution, and x-ray emission from a Cu slab target are studied via a hybrid model, which combines the hydrodynamics, collisional particle-in-cell, and Monte Carlo simulation techniques, and via a direct spectroscopic measurement. An absorption mechanism originating from the interaction of the laser pulse with plasma waves is found to increase the absorption rate by over 30% even for a very short, s-polarized laser pulse. Calculated and measured x-ray spectra are in good agreement, confirming the electron energy cutoff.

18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11969697

ABSTRACT

Transient ionization of an overdense plasma produced by a subpicosecond, p-polarized obliquely incident pulse laser of moderate intensity (10(16)-10(18) W/cm(2)) changes the plasma heat transfer via processes dominated by the return current and the absorption rate via ion acceleration. To explore the effect of variable ionization, a hybrid one-dimensional electro-magnetic particle-in-cell method that conforms to a direct solution of the Fokker-Planck-Landau equation is applied. A method that includes the Langevin equation to account for Coulomb collisions and the average ion model to calculate the nonlocal thermodynamic equilibrium ionization balance provides good agreement between the computed absorption and the measured results.

19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11970139

ABSTRACT

We have observed evidence of the emission of energetic He-and H-like ions of fluorine more than 1 MeV produced via the optical field ionization (OFI) from a solid target irradiated by an intense I=(2-4)x10(18) W/cm(2) (60 fs, lambda=800 nm), obliquely incident p-polarized pulse laser. The measured blue wing of He(alpha), He(beta), and Ly(alpha) lines of fluorine shows a feature of the Doppler-shifted spectrum due to the self-similar ion expansion dominated by superthermal electrons with the temperature T(h) approximately 100 keV. Using a collisional particle-in-cell simulation, which incorporates the nonlocal-thermodynamic-equilibrium ionization including OFI, we have obtained the plasma temperature, line shape, and maximal energy of accelerated ions, which agree well with those determined from the experimental spectra. The red wing of ion spectra gives the temperature of bulk plasma electrons.

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