Diagnosing the impact of relativistically intense prepulse on few-picosecond timeframes for short scale length laser-matter interactions

Abstract

With the rapid proliferation of multi-petawatt (MPW) lasers globally, a new era of high-energy density science promises to emerge within the next decade. However, precise control over how light at these ultra-relativistic intensities interacts with matter (especially with solid-density targets) will be crucial to fully realize the cutting-edge scientific advancements and technological breakthroughs that the MPW regime promises to unlock. In this manuscript, we present experimental results, supported by numerical simulations, which show how intense prepulse activity on few-ps (10-12 s) timescales leads to rapid shifts in the steepness of the preplasma generated on the surface of ultra-thin nanofoil targets. By combining a single-shot frequency resolved optical gating (FROG) autocorrelation device to diagnose on-shot incident laser pulse contrast, with coherent synchrotron emission (CSE) from relativistic laser plasmas as a probe for evolving plasma-scale length conditions, we provide an experimental benchmark for laser contrast on forthcoming MPW facilities, where high contrast on few-ps timescales will be essential for the next generation of laser-solid interactions.

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