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Dive into the research topics where Alexander Sävert is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander Sävert.


Optics Letters | 2013

High-intensity, high-contrast laser pulses generated from the fully diode-pumped Yb:glass laser system POLARIS

Marco Hornung; Sebastian Keppler; Ragnar Bödefeld; Alexander Kessler; Hartmut Liebetrau; Jörg Körner; Marco Hellwing; Frank Schorcht; Oliver Jäckel; Alexander Sävert; Jens Polz; Ajay Kawshik Arunachalam; Joachim Hein; Malte C. Kaluza

We report on the first generation of high-contrast, 164 fs duration pulses from the laser system POLARIS reaching focused peak intensities in excess of 2×10(20) W/cm2. To our knowledge, this is the highest peak intensity reported so far that has been achieved with a diode-pumped, solid-state laser. Several passive contrast enhancement techniques have been specially developed and implemented, achieving a relative prepulse intensity smaller than 10(-8) at t=-30 ps before the main pulse. Furthermore a closed-loop adaptive-optics system has been installed. Together with angular chirp compensation, this method has led to a significant reduction of the focal spot size and an increase of the peak intensity.


Optics Letters | 2014

16.6 J chirped femtosecond laser pulses from a diode-pumped Yb:CaF2 amplifier.

Alexander Kessler; Marco Hornung; Sebastian Keppler; Frank Schorcht; Marco Hellwing; Hartmut Liebetrau; Jörg Körner; Alexander Sävert; Mathias Siebold; M. Schnepp; Joachim Hein; M. C. Kaluza

We report the amplification of laser pulses at a center wavelength of 1034 nm to an energy of 16.6 J from a fully diode-pumped amplifier using Yb:CaF2 as the active medium. Pumped by a total optical power of 300 kW from high-power laser diodes, a gain factor of g=6.1 was achieved in a nine-pass amplifier configuration agreeing with numerical simulations. A measured spectral bandwidth of 10 nm full width at half-maximum promises a bandwidth-limited compression of the pulses down to a duration of 150 fs. These are, to our knowledge, the most energetic laser pulses achieved from a diode-pumped chirped-pulse amplifier so far.


Nature Communications | 2013

Optical control of hard X-ray polarization by electron injection in a laser wakefield accelerator

Michael Schnell; Alexander Sävert; I. Uschmann; Maria Reuter; Maria Nicolai; Tino Kämpfer; Björn Landgraf; Oliver Jäckel; Oliver Jansen; A. Pukhov; Malte C. Kaluza; Christian Spielmann

Laser-plasma particle accelerators could provide more compact sources of high-energy radiation than conventional accelerators. Moreover, because they deliver radiation in femtosecond pulses, they could improve the time resolution of X-ray absorption techniques. Here we show that we can measure and control the polarization of ultra-short, broad-band keV photon pulses emitted from a laser-plasma-based betatron source. The electron trajectories and hence the polarization of the emitted X-rays are experimentally controlled by the pulse-front tilt of the driving laser pulses. Particle-in-cell simulations show that an asymmetric plasma wave can be driven by a tilted pulse front and a non-symmetric intensity distribution of the focal spot. Both lead to a notable off-axis electron injection followed by collective electron–betatron oscillations. We expect that our method for an all-optical steering is not only useful for plasma-based X-ray sources but also has significance for future laser-based particle accelerators.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2011

High resolution 3D gas-jet characterization

B. Landgraf; Michael Schnell; Alexander Sävert; Malte C. Kaluza; Christian Spielmann

We present a tomographic characterization of gas jets employed for high-intensity laser-plasma interaction experiments where the shape can be non-symmetrically. With a Mach-Zehnder interferometer we measured the phase shift for different directions through the neutral density distribution of the gas jet. From the recorded interferograms it is possible to retrieve 3-dimensional neutral density distributions by tomographic reconstruction based on the filtered back projections. We report on criteria for the smallest number of recorded interferograms as well as a comparison with the widely used phase retrieval based on an Abel inversion. As an example for the performance of our approach, we present the characterization of nozzles with rectangular openings or gas jets with shock waves. With our setup we obtained a spatial resolution of less than 60 μm for an Argon density as low as 2 × 10(17) cm(-3).


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Direct observation of the injection dynamics of a laser wakefield accelerator using few-femtosecond shadowgraphy

Alexander Sävert; S. P. D. Mangles; Michael Schnell; Evangelos Siminos; J. M. Cole; M Leier; Maria Reuter; Matthew Schwab; Max Möller; K. Poder; Oliver Jäckel; G. G. Paulus; Christian Spielmann; Stefan Skupin; Z. Najmudin; Malte C. Kaluza

We present few-femtosecond shadowgraphic snapshots taken during the nonlinear evolution of the plasma wave in a laser wakefield accelerator with transverse synchronized few-cycle probe pulses. These snapshots can be directly associated with the electron density distribution within the plasma wave and give quantitative information about its size and shape. Our results show that self-injection of electrons into the first plasma-wave period is induced by a lengthening of the first plasma period. Three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations support our observations.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Few-cycle optical probe-pulse for investigation of relativistic laser-plasma interactions

M. B. Schwab; Alexander Sävert; Oliver Jäckel; Jens Polz; Michael Schnell; T. Rinck; Laszlo Veisz; Max Möller; Peter Hansinger; G. G. Paulus; Malte C. Kaluza

The development of a few-cycle optical probe-pulse for the investigation of laser-plasma interactions driven by a Ti:sapphire, 30 Terawatt (TW) laser system is described. The probe is seeded by a fraction of the driving lasers energy and is spectrally broadened via self-phase modulation in a hollow core fiber filled with a rare gas, then temporally compressed to a few optical cycles via chirped mirrors. Shadowgrams of the laser-driven plasma wave created in relativistic electron acceleration experiments are presented with few-fs temporal resolution, which is shown to be independent of post-interaction spectral filtering of the probe-beam.


Optics Express | 2014

Full characterization of the amplified spontaneous emission from a diode-pumped high-power laser system

Sebastian Keppler; Marco Hornung; R. Bödefeld; Alexander Sävert; Hartmut Liebetrau; Joachim Hein; M. C. Kaluza

We present the first complete temporal and spatial characterization of the amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) of laser radiation generated by a diode-pumped high-power laser system. The ASE of the different amplifiers was measured independently from the main pulse and was characterized within a time window of -10ms ≤ t ≤ 10ms and an accuracy of up to 15fs around the main pulse. Furthermore, the focusability and the energy of the ASE from each amplifier was measured after recompression. Using our analysis method, the laser components, which need to be optimized for a further improvement of the laser contrast, can be identified. This will be essential for laser-matter interaction experiments requiring a minimized ASE intensity or fluence.


Laser & Photonics Reviews | 2016

The generation of amplified spontaneous emission in high‐power CPA laser systems

Sebastian Keppler; Alexander Sävert; Jörg Körner; Marco Hornung; Hartmut Liebetrau; Joachim Hein; Malte C. Kaluza

Abstract An analytical model is presented describing the temporal intensity contrast determined by amplified spontaneous emission in high‐intensity laser systems which are based on the principle of chirped pulse amplification. The model describes both the generation and the amplification of the amplified spontaneous emission for each type of laser amplifier. This model is applied to different solid state laser materials which can support the amplification of pulse durations ≤350 fs . The results are compared to intensity and fluence thresholds, e.g. determined by damage thresholds of a certain target material to be used in high‐intensity applications. This allows determining if additional means for contrast improvement, e.g. plasma mirrors, are required for a certain type of laser system and application. Using this model, the requirements for an optimized high‐contrast front‐end design are derived regarding the necessary contrast improvement and the amplified “clean” output energy for a desired focussed peak intensity. Finally, the model is compared to measurements at three different high‐intensity laser systems based on Ti:Sapphire and Yb:glass. These measurements show an excellent agreement with the model.


New Journal of Physics | 2010

Micron-scale fast electron filaments and recirculation determined from rear-side optical emission in high-intensity laser–solid interactions

C. Bellei; S. R. Nagel; S. Kar; A. Henig; S. Kneip; C. A. J. Palmer; Alexander Sävert; L. Willingale; D. C. Carroll; B. Dromey; J.S. Green; K. Markey; P.T. Simpson; Rosemary Clarke; H. Lowe; D. Neely; C. Spindloe; M. Tolley; Malte C. Kaluza; S. P. D. Mangles; P. McKenna; P. A. Norreys; Jörg Schreiber; Matthew Zepf; J. R. Davies; K. Krushelnick; Z. Najmudin

The transport of relativistic electrons generated in the interaction of petawatt class lasers with solid targets has been studied through measurements of the second harmonic optical emission from their rear surface. The high degree of polarization of the emission indicates that it is predominantly optical transition radiation (TR). A halo that surrounds the main region of emission is also polarized and is attributed to the effect of electron recirculation. The variation of the polarization state and intensity of radiation with the angle of observation indicates that the emission of TR is highly directional and provides evidence for the presence of mu m-size filaments. A brief discussion on the possible causes of such a fine electron beam structure is given.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Noncollinear Polarization Gating of Attosecond Pulse Trains in the Relativistic Regime

M. Yeung; J. Bierbach; E. Eckner; S. Rykovanov; S. Kuschel; Alexander Sävert; M. Förster; C. Rödel; G. G. Paulus; S. Cousens; M. Coughlan; B. Dromey; Matthew Zepf

High order harmonics generated at relativistic intensities have long been recognized as a route to the most powerful extreme ultraviolet pulses. Reliably generating isolated attosecond pulses requires gating to only a single dominant optical cycle, but techniques developed for lower power lasers have not been readily transferable. We present a novel method to temporally gate attosecond pulse trains by combining noncollinear and polarization gating. This scheme uses a split beam configuration which allows pulse gating to be implemented at the high beam fluence typical of multi-TW to PW class laser systems. Scalings for the gate width demonstrate that isolated attosecond pulses are possible even for modest pulse durations achievable for existing and planned future ultrashort high-power laser systems. Experimental results demonstrating the spectral effects of temporal gating on harmonic spectra generated by a relativistic laser plasma interaction are shown.

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Joachim Hein

Helmholtz Institute Jena

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Marco Hornung

Helmholtz Institute Jena

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