Author:
MONTGOMERY D.S.,JOHNSON R.P.,COBBLE J.A.,FERNÁNDEZ J.C.,LINDMAN E.L.,ROSE H.A.,ESTABROOK K.G.
Abstract
The TRIDENT laser system at the Los Alamos National
Laboratory is being used for fundamental experiments which
study the interaction of self-focusing, stimulated Raman
scattering (SRS) and stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS)
in a near-diffraction-limited (single) laser hot spot in
order to better understand the coupling between these plasma
instabilities. The diffraction limited beam mimics a single
hot spot found in speckle distributions that are typical
of random or kinoform phase plates (RPP or KPP) used for
spatial smoothing of laser beams. A long scale length,
hot plasma (∼1 mm, ∼0.6 keV) is created by a separate
heater beam, and the single hot spot beam is used to drive
parametric instabilities. The focal plane distribution
and wave-front of the interaction beam are characterized,
and its intensity can be varied between 1014–1016
W/cm2. The plasma density, temperature, and
flow profiles are measured using a gated imaging spectroscopy
of collective Thomson scattering from the heater beam.
Results of the laser and plasma characterization, and initial
results of backscattered SRS, SBS, and beam steering in
a flowing plasma are presented.
Subject
Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Condensed Matter Physics,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Cited by
53 articles.
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