Scientific Reports (Aug 2017)

Micron-scale mapping of megagauss magnetic fields using optical polarimetry to probe hot electron transport in petawatt-class laser-solid interactions

  • Gourab Chatterjee,
  • Prashant Kumar Singh,
  • A. P. L. Robinson,
  • D. Blackman,
  • N. Booth,
  • O. Culfa,
  • R. J. Dance,
  • L. A. Gizzi,
  • R. J. Gray,
  • J. S. Green,
  • P. Koester,
  • G. Ravindra Kumar,
  • L. Labate,
  • Amit D. Lad,
  • K. L. Lancaster,
  • J. Pasley,
  • N. C. Woolsey,
  • P. P. Rajeev

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-08619-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract The transport of hot, relativistic electrons produced by the interaction of an intense petawatt laser pulse with a solid has garnered interest due to its potential application in the development of innovative x-ray sources and ion-acceleration schemes. We report on spatially and temporally resolved measurements of megagauss magnetic fields at the rear of a 50-μm thick plastic target, irradiated by a multi-picosecond petawatt laser pulse at an incident intensity of ~1020 W/cm2. The pump-probe polarimetric measurements with micron-scale spatial resolution reveal the dynamics of the magnetic fields generated by the hot electron distribution at the target rear. An annular magnetic field profile was observed ~5 ps after the interaction, indicating a relatively smooth hot electron distribution at the rear-side of the plastic target. This is contrary to previous time-integrated measurements, which infer that such targets will produce highly structured hot electron transport. We measured large-scale filamentation of the hot electron distribution at the target rear only at later time-scales of ~10 ps, resulting in a commensurate large-scale filamentation of the magnetic field profile. Three-dimensional hybrid simulations corroborate our experimental observations and demonstrate a beam-like hot electron transport at initial time-scales that may be attributed to the local resistivity profile at the target rear.