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Flying focus: Spatial and temporal control of intensity for laser-based applications
Author(s) -
Dustin Froula,
J. P. Palastro,
D. Turnbull,
Andrew Davies,
Khanh Linh Nguyen,
Andrew J. Howard,
D. Ramsey,
P. Franke,
Seung-Whan Bahk,
I. A. Begishev,
R. Boni,
J. Bromage,
S. Bucht,
R. K. Follett,
D. Haberberger,
Gregory W. Jenkins,
J. Katz,
T. J. Kessler,
Jessica Shaw,
Jorge Vieira
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
physics of plasmas
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.75
H-Index - 160
eISSN - 1089-7674
pISSN - 1070-664X
DOI - 10.1063/1.5086308
Subject(s) - physics , optics , laser , rayleigh length , focus (optics) , ionization , refraction , laser beams , ion , quantum mechanics
An advanced focusing scheme, called a “flying focus,” uses a chromatic focusing system combined with a broadband laser pulse with its colors arranged in time to propagate a high intensity focus over a distance that can be much greater than its Rayleigh length while decoupling the speed at which the peak intensity propagates from its group velocity. The flying focus generates a short effective pulse duration with a small diameter focal spot that co- or counter-propagates along the optical axis at any velocity. Experiments validating the concept measured subluminal (−0.09c) to superluminal (39c) focal spot velocities with a nearly constant peak intensity over 4.5 mm. Experiments that increased the peak intensity above the ionization threshold for gas demonstrated ionization waves propagating at the velocity of the flying focus. These ionization waves of any velocity overcome several laser-plasma propagation issues, including ionization-induced refraction. The flying focus presents opportunities to overcome current fundamental limitations in laser-plasma amplifiers, laser wakefield accelerators, photon accelerators, and high-order frequency conversion.An advanced focusing scheme, called a “flying focus,” uses a chromatic focusing system combined with a broadband laser pulse with its colors arranged in time to propagate a high intensity focus over a distance that can be much greater than its Rayleigh length while decoupling the speed at which the peak intensity propagates from its group velocity. The flying focus generates a short effective pulse duration with a small diameter focal spot that co- or counter-propagates along the optical axis at any velocity. Experiments validating the concept measured subluminal (−0.09c) to superluminal (39c) focal spot velocities with a nearly constant peak intensity over 4.5 mm. Experiments that increased the peak intensity above the ionization threshold for gas demonstrated ionization waves propagating at the velocity of the flying focus. These ionization waves of any velocity overcome several laser-plasma propagation issues, including ionization-induced refraction. The flying focus presents opportunities to overcome ...

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