Refine your search:     
Report No.
 - 
Search Results: Records 1-2 displayed on this page of 2
  • 1

Presentation/Publication Type

Initialising ...

Refine

Journal/Book Title

Initialising ...

Meeting title

Initialising ...

First Author

Initialising ...

Keyword

Initialising ...

Language

Initialising ...

Publication Year

Initialising ...

Held year of conference

Initialising ...

Save select records

Journal Articles

Development of laser-driven quasi-monoenergetic proton beam line for radiobiology

Yogo, Akifumi; Maeda, Takuya; Hori, Toshihiko; Sakaki, Hironao; Ogura, Koichi; Nishiuchi, Mamiko; Sagisaka, Akito; Bolton, P.; Murakami, Masao*; Kawanishi, Shunichi; et al.

Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research A, 653(1), p.189 - 192, 2011/10

 Times Cited Count:9 Percentile:56.9(Instruments & Instrumentation)

Oral presentation

Novel X-ray generation schemes based on electron cusps formed via intense laser plasma interaction

Kando, Masaki; Pirozhkov, A. S.; Esirkepov, T. Z.; Kawase, Keigo*; Ragozin, E. N.*; Faenov, A. Ya.*; Pikuz, T.*; Fukuda, Yuji; Sagisaka, Akito; Mori, Michiaki; et al.

no journal, , 

We present the results of two kinds of experiments and theoretical description for generating coherent, ultrashort, tunable X-ray photons. Nonlinear interaction of intense laser pulses with plasma creates stable, specific structures such as electron cusps. For example, wake waves excited in an unerdense plasma by intense, short-pulse laser becomes dense and propagate along the laser pulse. These wake waves act as relativistic flying mirrors. The flying mirror can reflect a counter-propagating laser pulse and directly convert it into high-frequency radiation, with a frequency multiplication factor $$sim$$ 4$$gamma^2$$ and a pulse shortening with the same factor. We present the results of experiments. Another mechanism of coherent X-ray generation is based on a single laser pulse irradiating gas jet target. In this case, bright high-order harmonics of both odd and even orders are emitted in the forward direction. We attribute this to the synchrotron or nonlinear Thomson scattering of a bunch of electrons in the cusp interacting with the laser.

2 (Records 1-2 displayed on this page)
  • 1