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High energy electrons, nuclear phenomena and heating in petawatt laser-solid experiments
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1999
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Nuclear Beam PhysicsNuclear PhysicsEngineeringLaser-plasma InteractionRelativistic PlasmaLaser Plasma PhysicHigh-power LasersPetawatt LaserLaser Plasma PhysicsNuclear PhenomenaFree Electron LaserLaser Matter InteractionsFree-electron LasersPlasma AccelerationPhysicsRelativistic Laser-matter InteractionPetawatt Laser-solid ExperimentsAtomic PhysicsHigh Energy ElectronsParticle Beam PhysicsNatural SciencesParticle PhysicsApplied PhysicsHigh-energy Lasers
The Petawatt laser at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) has opened a new regime of laser matter interactions in which the quiver motion of plasma electrons is fully relativistic with energies extending well above the threshold for nuclear processes. In addition to ∼few MeV ponderomotive electrons produced in ultra intense laser-solid interactions, we have found a high energy component of electrons extending to ∼100 MeV apparently from relativistic selffocusing and plasma acceleration in the underdense preformed plasma. The generation of hard bremsstrahlung, photonuclear reactions, and preliminary evidence for positron-electron pair production will be discussed.