We present the development and characterization of a high-stability,multi-material,multi-thickness tape-drive target for laser-driven acceleration at repetition rates of up to 100 Hz.The tape surface position was meas...We present the development and characterization of a high-stability,multi-material,multi-thickness tape-drive target for laser-driven acceleration at repetition rates of up to 100 Hz.The tape surface position was measured to be stable on the sub-micrometre scale,compatible with the high-numerical aperture focusing geometries required to achieve relativistic intensity interactions with the pulse energy available in current multi-Hz and near-future higher repetition-rate lasers(>kHz).Long-term drift was characterized at 100 Hz demonstrating suitability for operation over extended periods.The target was continuously operated at up to 5 Hz in a recent experiment for 70,000 shots without intervention by the experimental team,with the exception of tape replacement,producing the largest data-set of relativistically intense laser–solid foil measurements to date.This tape drive provides robust targetry for the generation and study of high-repetitionrate ion beams using next-generation high-power laser systems,also enabling wider applications of laser-driven proton sources.展开更多
基金Special thanks go to the staff at the Central Laser Facility who provided laser operational support,mechanical and electrical support and computational and administrative support throughout the experiment.We acknowledge funding from UK STFC,Grant Nos.ST/P002021/1 and ST/V001639/1U.S.DOE Office of Science,Fusion Energy Sciences under FWP No.100182+2 种基金in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant No.1632708G.D.G.acknowledges support from the DOE NNSA SSGF program under DE-NA0003960This work has been partially supported by the project Advanced Research Using High-intensity Laser-produced Photons and Particles(CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000789)from the European Regional Development Fund(ADONIS).
文摘We present the development and characterization of a high-stability,multi-material,multi-thickness tape-drive target for laser-driven acceleration at repetition rates of up to 100 Hz.The tape surface position was measured to be stable on the sub-micrometre scale,compatible with the high-numerical aperture focusing geometries required to achieve relativistic intensity interactions with the pulse energy available in current multi-Hz and near-future higher repetition-rate lasers(>kHz).Long-term drift was characterized at 100 Hz demonstrating suitability for operation over extended periods.The target was continuously operated at up to 5 Hz in a recent experiment for 70,000 shots without intervention by the experimental team,with the exception of tape replacement,producing the largest data-set of relativistically intense laser–solid foil measurements to date.This tape drive provides robust targetry for the generation and study of high-repetitionrate ion beams using next-generation high-power laser systems,also enabling wider applications of laser-driven proton sources.