17 results match your criteria: "University of Bordeaux-CNRS-CEA[Affiliation]"
Phys Chem Chem Phys
September 2024
Shanghai Key Lab of Modern Optical System, University of Shanghai for Science and Technology, Shanghai 200093, China.
High power femtosecond laser pulses launched in air undergo nonlinear filamentary propagation, featuring a bright and thin plasma channel in air with its length much longer than the Rayleigh length of the laser beam. During this nonlinear propagation process, the laser pulses experience rich and complex spatial and temporal transformations. With its applications ranging from supercontinuum generation, laser pulse compression, remote sensing to triggering of lightning, the underlying physical mechanism of filamentation has been intensively studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
February 2024
CEA-CESTA, Le Barp F-33114, France.
The quality of the proton beam produced by target normal sheath acceleration (TNSA) with high-power lasers can be significantly improved with the use of helical coils. While they showed promising results in terms of focusing, their performances in terms of the of cut-off energy and bunching stay limited due to the dispersive nature of helical coils. A new scheme of helical coil with a tube surrounding the helix is introduced, and the first numerical simulations and an analytical model show a possibility of a drastic reduction of the current pulse dispersion for the parameters of high-power-laser facilities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
April 2023
Department of Physical Chemistry, Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society, Berlin, Germany.
Singlet fission may boost photovoltaic efficiency by transforming a singlet exciton into two triplet excitons and thereby doubling the number of excited charge carriers. The primary step of singlet fission is the ultrafast creation of the correlated triplet pair. Whereas several mechanisms have been proposed to explain this step, none has emerged as a consensus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
May 2022
University of Bordeaux-CNRS-CEA, Centre Lasers Intenses et Applications, UMR 5107, 33405 Talence, France.
This article presents the use of artificial neural networks (ANN) to predict nonlocal heat flux transport within hydrodynamic simulations. Several cases of laser driven ablation of a plastic target are considered. The database for the ANN training phase is built using the transport module of the hydrodynamic code CHIC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci
November 2020
Centre Laser Intenses et Applications, University of Bordeaux - CNRS - CEA, 33405 Talence, France.
In this paper, I consider the motivations, recent results and perspectives for the inertial confinement fusion (ICF) studies in Europe. The European approach is based on the direct drive scheme with a preference for the central ignition boosted by a strong shock. Compared to other schemes, shock ignition offers a higher gain needed for the design of a future commercial reactor and relatively simple and technological targets, but implies a more complicated physics of laser-target interaction, energy transport and ignition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2020
Faculty of Physics and International Laser Center, M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia.
The development of high power mid-IR laser applications requires a study on laser induced damage threshold (LIDT) in the mid-IR. In this paper we have measured the wavelength dependence of the plasma formation threshold (PFT) that is a LIDT precursor. In order to interpret the observed trends numerically, a model describing the laser induced electron dynamics, based on multiple rate equations, has been developed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
September 2019
Sorbonne Université, Faculté des Sciences et Ingénierie, UMR7605, F-75252, Paris, France.
Suprathermal electrons are routinely generated in high-intensity laser produced plasmas via instabilities driven by non-linear laser-plasma interaction. Their accurate characterization is crucial for the performance of inertial confinement fusion as well as for performing experiments in laboratory astrophysics and in general high-energy-density physics. Here, we present studies of non-thermal atomic states excited by suprathermal electrons in kJ-ns-laser produced plasmas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
April 2019
ALPhANOV, Technological Centre for Optics and Lasers, Optic Institute of Aquitaine, rue F. Mitterrand, 33400 Talence, France.
Laser-induced textures have been proven to be excellent solutions for modifying wetting, friction, biocompatibility, and optical properties of solids. The possibility to generate 2D-submicron morphologies by laser processing has been demonstrated recently. Employing double-pulse irradiation, it is possible to control the induced structures and to fabricate novel and more complex 2D-textures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
March 2019
Fraunhofer Institute for Material and Beam Technology IWS, Winterbergstrasse 28, 01277 Dresden, Germany.
Controlling laser induced surface morphology is essential for developing specialized functional surfaces. This work presents novel, multi-scale periodic patterns with two-dimensional symmetry generated on stainless steel, polyimide and sapphire. The microstructures were realized by combining Direct Laser Interference Patterning with the generation of Laser Induced Periodic Surface Structures in a one-step process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Sci Instrum
October 2018
CELIA, University of Bordeaux-CNRS-CEA, Talence, France.
The targets that are used to produce high-energy protons with ultra-high intensity lasers generate a strong electromagnetic pulse (EMP). To mitigate that undesired side effect, we developed and tested a concept called the "birdhouse." It consists in confining the EMP field in a finite volume and in dissipating the trapped electromagnetic energy with an electric resistor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRSC Adv
April 2018
ALPhANOV, Technological Centre for Optics and Lasers, Optic Institute of Aquitaine Rue F. Mitterrand, 33400 Talence France
Surface structuring by femtosecond lasers has emerged as an efficient tool to functionalize the surfaces of various solid materials. Laser induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS) can drastically impact the wetting, friction and optical properties of the surface depending on the size, aspect ratio and period of the structures. Morphological characteristics in the nanoscale, such as nano roughness, contributing to a hierarchical surface formation are considered to have a significant impact on those properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
February 2018
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, 1 Homi Bhabha Road, Mumbai 400005, India.
We report the lifetime of intense-laser (2×10^{19} W/cm^{2}) generated relativistic electron pulses in solids by measuring the time evolution of their Cherenkov emission. Using a picosecond resolution optical Kerr gating technique, we demonstrate that the electrons remain relativistic as long as 50 picoseconds-more than 1000 times longer than the incident light pulse. Numerical simulations of the propagation of relativistic electrons and the emitted Cherenkov radiation with Monte Carlo geant4 package reproduce the striking experimental findings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
August 2017
École Nationale Supérieure de Lyon, University Claude Bernard, CNRS, 69342 Lyon, France.
Recent experiments are showing possibilities to generate strong magnetic fields on the excess of 500 T with high-energy nanosecond laser pulses in a compact setup of a capacitor connected to a single turn coil. Hot electrons ejected from the capacitor plate (cathode) are collected at the other plate (anode), thus providing the source of a current in the coil. However, the physical processes leading to generation of currents exceeding hundreds of kiloamperes in such a laser-driven diode are not sufficiently understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
September 2017
Centre for Plasma Physics, School of Mathematics and Physics, Queen's University of Belfast, BT7 1NN, Belfast, UK.
The characteristics of laser driven proton beams can be efficiently controlled and optimised by employing a recently developed helical coil technique, which exploits the transient self-charging of solid targets irradiated by intense laser pulses. Here we demonstrate a well collimated (<1° divergence) and narrow bandwidth (~10% energy spread) proton beamlet of ~10 particles at 10 ± 0.5 MeV obtained by irradiating helical coil targets with a few joules, sub-ps laser pulses at an intensity of ~2 × 10 W cm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
December 2016
LULI, UMR 7605 CNRS, Ecole Polytechnique, 91128 Palaiseau cedex, France.
Experiments have been performed evidencing significant stimulated Raman sidescattering (SRS) at large angles from the density gradient. This was achieved in long scale-length high-temperature plasmas in which two beams couple to the same scattered electromagnetic wave further demonstrating for the first time this multiple-beam collective SRS interaction. The collective nature of the coupling and the amplification at large angles from the density gradient increase the global SRS losses and produce light scattered in novel directions out of the planes of incidence of the beams.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Med
December 2015
CELIA Centre des Lasers Intenses et Applications, University of Bordeaux CNRS CEA, Talence F-33400, France.
A new deterministic method for calculating the dose distribution in the electron radiotherapy field is presented. The aim of this work was to validate our model by comparing it with the Monte Carlo simulation toolkit, GEANT4. A comparison of the longitudinal and transverse dose deposition profiles and electron distributions in homogeneous water phantoms showed a good accuracy of our model for electron transport, while reducing the calculation time by a factor of 50.
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