Relativistically intense XUV radiation from laser-illuminated near-critical plasmas
arXiv:1701.07268 · doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.98.023421
Abstract
Pulses of extreme ultraviolet (XUV) light, with wavelengths between 10 and 100$\,$nm, can be used to image and excite ultra-fast phenomena such as the motion of atomic electrons. Here we show that the illumination of plasma with near-critical electron density may be used as a source of relativistically intense XUV radiation, providing the means for novel XUV-pump--XUV-probe experiments in the non-linear regime. We describe how the optimal regime may be reached by tailoring the laser-target interaction parameters and by the presence of preplasma. Our results indicate that currently available laser facilities are capable of producing XUV pulses with duration $\sim 10~\text{fs}$, brilliance in excess of $10^{23}$ photons/s/mm$^2$/mrad$^2$ (0.1% bandwidth) and intensity $Iλ^2 \gtrsim 10^{19}~\text{W}\text{cm}^{-2}μ\text{m}^2$.
11 pages, 9 figures; additional theoretical comparisons and analysis of density ramps