Observation of annular electron beam transport in multi-TeraWatt laser-solid interactions

Electron energy transport experiments conducted on the Vulcan 100 TW laser facility with large area foil targets are described. For plastic targets it is shown, by the plasma expansion observed in shadowgrams taken after the interaction, that there is a transition between the collimated electron flo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Norreys, P, Green, J, Davies, JR, Tatarakis, M, Clark, E, Beg, F, Dangor, A, Lancaster, K, Wei, MS, Zepf, M, Krushelnick, K
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2006
Description
Summary:Electron energy transport experiments conducted on the Vulcan 100 TW laser facility with large area foil targets are described. For plastic targets it is shown, by the plasma expansion observed in shadowgrams taken after the interaction, that there is a transition between the collimated electron flow previously reported at the 10 TW power level to an annular electron flow pattern with a 20° divergence angle for peak powers of 68 TW. Intermediate powers show that both the central collimated flow pattern and the surrounding annular-shaped heated region can co-exist. The measurements are consistent with the Davies rigid beam model for fast electron flow (Davies 2003 Phys. Rev. E 68 056404) and LSP modelling provides additional insight into the observed results. © 2006 IOP Publishing Ltd.