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91̽»¨
Atomic and Laser Physics
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Prof Peter Norreys FInstP;

Professorial Research Fellow

Research theme

  • Accelerator physics
  • Lasers and high energy density science
  • Fundamental particles and interactions
  • Plasma physics

Sub department

  • Atomic and Laser Physics

Research groups

  • 91̽»¨ Centre for High Energy Density Science (OxCHEDS)
peter.norreys@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72220
Clarendon Laboratory, room 141.1
  • About
  • Research
  • Teaching
  • Publications

Plasma currents and electron distribution functions under a dc electric field of arbitrary strength

Physical Review Letters 100:18 (2008)

Authors:

SM Weng, ZM Sheng, MQ He, J Zhang, PA Norreys, M Sherlock, APL Robinson

Abstract:

The currents induced by arbitrarily strong dc electric fields in plasma and the evolution of electron distributions have been studied by Fokker-Planck simulations. We find that the electron distributions evolve distinctly under different fields; especially, the electron distribution is well represented by the sum of a stationary and drifting Maxwellian at the moderate field. A set of hydrodynamiclike equations, similar to Spitzer's but without the weak-field limit, is given for calculating the current. It is more suitable for application in hybrid particle-in-cell simulations and may extend plasma transport theory in models that do not employ a kinetic description of the electrons. © 2008 The American Physical Society.

Neutron generation from impact fast ignition

Journal of Physics Conference Series IOP Publishing 112:2 (2008) 022065

Authors:

T Watari, T Sakaiya, H Azechi, M Nakai, H Shiraga, K Shigemori, H Hosoda, H Saito, Y Arikawa, Y Sakawa, S Fujioka, Y Hironaka, M Murakami, M Karasik, J Gardner, J Bates, D Colombant, J Weber, S Obenschain, Y Aglitsky, PA Norreys, S Eliezer, K Mima

Laser Heating of Solid Matter by Light-Pressure-Driven Shocks at Ultrarelativistic Intensities

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society (APS) 100:16 (2008) 165002

Authors:

KU Akli, SB Hansen, AJ Kemp, RR Freeman, FN Beg, DC Clark, SD Chen, D Hey, SP Hatchett, K Highbarger, E Giraldez, JS Green, G Gregori, KL Lancaster, T Ma, AJ MacKinnon, P Norreys, N Patel, J Pasley, C Shearer, RB Stephens, C Stoeckl, M Storm, W Theobald, LD Van Woerkom, R Weber, MH Key

Space and time resolved measurements of the heating of solids to ten million kelvin by a petawatt laser

New Journal of Physics 10 (2008)

Authors:

M Nakatsutsumi, JR Davies, R Kodama, JS Green, KL Lancaster, KU Akli, FN Beg, SN Chen, D Clark, RR Freeman, CD Gregory, H Habara, R Heathcote, DS Hey, K Highbarger, P Jaanimagi, MH Key, K Krushelnick, T Ma, A MacPhee, AJ MacKinnon, H Nakamura, RB Stephens, M Storm, M Tampo, W Theobald, L Van Woerkom, RL Weber, MS Wei, NC Woolsey, PA Norreys

Abstract:

The heating of plane solid targets by the Vulcan petawatt laser at powers of 0.32-0.73 PW and intensities of up to 4 × 1020W cm -2 has been diagnosed with a temporal resolution of 17 ps and a spatial resolution of 30 μm, by measuring optical emission from the opposite side of the target to the laser with a streak camera. Second harmonic emission was filtered out and the target viewed at an angle to eliminate optical transition radiation. Spatial resolution was obtained by imaging the emission onto a bundle of fibre optics, arranged into a one-dimensional array at the camera entrance. The results show that a region 160 μm in diameter can be heated to a temperature of ∼107 K (kT/e ∼ keV) in solid targets from 10 to 20 μm thick and that this temperature is maintained for at least 20 ps, confirming the utility of PW lasers in the study of high energy density physics. Hybrid code modelling shows that magnetic field generation prevents increased target heating by electron refluxing above a certain target thickness and that the absorption of laser energy into electrons entering the solid target was between 15-30%, and tends to increase with laser energy. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.

Laser heating of solid matter by light-pressure-driven shocks at ultrarelativistic intensities

Physical Review Letters 100:16 (2008)

Authors:

KU Akli, SB Hansen, AJ Kemp, RR Freeman, FN Beg, DC Clark, SD Chen, D Hey, SP Hatchett, K Highbarger, E Giraldez, JS Green, G Gregori, KL Lancaster, T Ma, AJ MacKinnon, P Norreys, N Patel, J Pasley, C Shearer, RB Stephens, C Stoeckl, M Storm, W Theobald, LD Van Woerkom, R Weber, MH Key

Abstract:

The heating of solid targets irradiated by 5×1020Wcm-2, 0.8 ps, 1.05μm wavelength laser light is studied by x-ray spectroscopy of the K-shell emission from thin layers of Ni, Mo, and V. A surface layer is heated to ∼5keV with an axial temperature gradient of 0.6μm scale length. Images of Ni Lyα show the hot region has ≤25μm diameter. These data are consistent with collisional particle-in-cell simulations using preformed plasma density profiles from hydrodynamic modeling which show that the >100Gbar light pressure compresses the preformed plasma and drives a shock into the solid, heating a thin layer. © 2008 The American Physical Society.

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