21–26 Jul 2024
NIU Naperville Conference Center
US/Central timezone

Photon acceleration of high-intensity vector vortex beams into the extreme ultraviolet

23 Jul 2024, 14:50
20m
room 261

room 261

WG6

Speaker

Dr Kyle Miller (Laboratory for Laser Energetics, University of Rochester)

Description

Extreme ultraviolet (XUV) light sources allow for the probing of bound electron dynamics on attosecond scales, interrogation of high-energy-density and warm dense matter, photolithography of nanometer-scale features, and access to novel regimes of strong-field quantum electrodynamics. Despite the importance of these applications, coherent XUV light sources remain relatively rare, and those that do exist are limited in their peak intensity and spatio-polarization structure. Here, we demonstrate that photon acceleration of optical laser pulses in the moving density gradient of an electron-beam-driven plasma wave can produce relativistically intense XUV laser pulses that preserve the spatio-polarization structure of the original pulse. Quasi-3D, boosted-frame particle-in-cell simulations show the formation of XUV attosecond vector vortex pulses with ~30-nm wavelengths, nearly flat phase fronts, and intensities exceeding $10^{21}$ W/cm$^2$.

Working group WG6 : Radiation generation, medical and industrial applications

Primary author

Dr Kyle Miller (Laboratory for Laser Energetics, University of Rochester)

Co-authors

Jacob Pierce (University of California, Los Angeles) Brandon Russell (University of Michigan) Alec Thomas (University of Michigan) Warren Mori (University of California Los Angeles) John Palastro (LLE Rochester)

Presentation materials