Symmetry (Oct 2021)

Deep Penetration of UV Radiation into PMMA and Electron Acceleration in Long Plasma Channels Produced by 100 ns KrF Laser Pulses

  • Vladimir D. Zvorykin,
  • Sergei V. Arlantsev,
  • Alexey V. Shutov,
  • Nikolay N. Ustinovskii,
  • Polad V. Veliev

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/sym13101883
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
p. 1883

Abstract

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Long (~1 mm), narrow (30−40 μm in diameter) corrugated capillary-like channels were produced in the axially symmetric 2D interaction regime of 100 ns KrF laser pulses with polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) at intensities of up to 5 × 1012 W/cm2. The channels extended from the top of a deep (~1 mm) conical ablative crater and terminated in a 0.5 mm size crown-like pattern. The modeling experiments with preliminary drilled capillaries in PMMA targets and Monte Carlo simulations evidenced that the crown origin might be caused by high-energy (0.1–0.25 MeV) electrons, which are much higher than the electron temperature of the plasma corona ~100 eV. This indicates the presence of an unusual direct electron acceleration regime. Firstly, fast electrons are generated due to laser plasma instabilities favored by a long-length interaction of a narrow-band radiation with plasma in the crater. Then, the electrons are accelerated by an axial component of the electrical field in a plasma-filled corrugated capillary waveguide enhanced by radiation self-focusing and specular reflection at the radial plasma gradient, while channel ripples serve the slowing down of the electromagnetic wave in the phase with electrons.

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