We present a two-stage noncollinear optical parametric chirped-pulse amplification system that generates 7.9 fs pulses containing 130 mJ of energy at an 805 nm central wavelength and 10 Hz repetition rate. These 16 TW light pulses are compressed to within 5% of their Fourier limit and are carefully characterized by the use of home-built pulse diagnostics. The contrast ratio before the main pulse has been measured as 10(-4), 10(-8), and 10(-11) at t=-3.3 ps, t=-5 ps, and t=-30 ps, respectively. This source allows for experiments in a regime of relativistic light-matter interactions and attosecond science.
We investigate ultrafast (fs) electron dynamics in a liquid hydrogen sample, isochorically and volumetrically heated to a moderately coupled plasma state. Thomson scattering measurements using 91.8 eV photons from the free-electron laser in Hamburg (FLASH at DESY) show that the hydrogen plasma has been driven to a nonthermal state with an electron temperature of 13 eV and an ion temperature below 0.1 eV, while the free-electron density is 2:8 Â 10 20 cm À3 . For dense plasmas, our experimental data strongly support a nonequilibrium kinetics model that uses impact ionization cross sections based on classical free-electron collisions. The investigation of warm dense matter (WDM) is one of the grand challenges of contemporary physics [1]. WDM is a plasma state characterized by moderate-tostrong interparticle coupling which takes place at freeelectron temperatures of several eV and free-electron densities around solid density [1]. It is present in many physical environments, such as planetary interiors [2,3], gravitationally collapsing protostellar disks, laser matter interaction and particularly during the implosion of an inertial confinement fusion capsule [4]. While in the astrophysical context WDM exists under stable conditions, in the laboratory it is achieved only as a transient state bridging condensed matter and hot plasma regimes. Here, we report on the first investigation of the nonequilibrium transition of hydrogen from a liquid to a moderately coupled plasma on the fs time scale, induced by highly intense soft-x-ray irradiation. This is an important step towards the investigation of strongly-coupled plasmas which are within reach of current light sources such as the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS). Our measurement enables unprecedented direct tests of nonequilibrium statistical models beyond mean field theories in a regime where collision and relaxation processes are dominant [5][6][7].The use of x-ray scattering for the investigation of dense, strongly-coupled plasmas was successfully demonstrated in the past decade [5,[7][8][9][10][11]. This technique is the x-ray analog of optical Thomson scattering (TS) [12] and enables the experimental determination of plasma parameters in dense systems where optical light cannot penetrate. While previous experiments were carried out using highenergy laser facilities, the advent of soft-and hard-x-ray free-electron lasers (FELs) makes ultrashort high brightness beams available for this type of research [13,14]. This Letter reports on ultrafast heating of liquid hydrogen and TS measurement of dense plasma parameters using softx-ray FEL radiation. For the first time, nonequilibrium distributions are observed and the underlying relaxation dynamics are compared with kinetic models showing electron relaxation times in the order of 20 fs, thus, shorter than the pulse duration.The scattering taking place is collective TS, which is characterized by a spectrally blue and red shifted response due to collective electron motion, plasmons, and nearly elastic scattering due t...
The resolution of ultrafast studies performed at extreme ultraviolet and X-ray free-electron lasers is still limited by shot-to-shot variations of the temporal pulse characteristics. Here we show a versatile single-shot temporal diagnostic tool that allows the determination of the extreme ultraviolet pulse duration and the relative arrival time with respect to an external pump-probe laser pulse. This method is based on time-resolved optical probing of the transient reflectivity change due to linear absorption of the extreme ultraviolet pulse within a solid material. In this work, we present measurements performed at the FLASH free-electron laser. We determine the pulse duration at two distinct wavelengths, yielding (184 ± 14) fs at 41.5 nm and (21 ± 19) fs at 5.5 nm. Furthermore, we demonstrate the feasibility to operate the tool as an online diagnostic by using a 20-nm-thin Si 3 N 4 membrane as target. Our results are supported by detailed numerical and analytical investigations.
The pulse duration, and, more generally, the temporal intensity profile of free-electron laser (FEL)\ud pulses, is of utmost importance for exploring the new perspectives offered by FELs; it is a nontrivial\ud experimental parameter that needs to be characterized. We measured the pulse shape of an extreme\ud ultraviolet externally seeded FEL operating in high-gain harmonic generation mode. Two different methods\ud based on the cross-correlation of the FEL pulses with an external optical laser were used. The two methods,\ud one capable of single-shot performance, may both be implemented as online diagnostics in FEL facilities.\ud The measurements were carried out at the seeded FEL facility FERMI. The FEL temporal pulse\ud characteristics were measured and studied in a range of FEL wavelengths and machine settings, and they\ud were compared to the predictions of a theoretical model. The measurements allowed a direct observation of\ud the pulse lengthening and splitting at saturation, in agreement with the proposed theory
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