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Dive into the research topics where B. Ersfeld is active.

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Featured researches published by B. Ersfeld.


Scientific Reports | 2017

An ultra-high gain and efficient amplifier based on Raman amplification in plasma

G. Vieux; S. Cipiccia; D. W. Grant; Nuno Lemos; P. Grant; C. Ciocarlan; B. Ersfeld; Min Sup Hur; P. Lepipas; G. G. Manahan; G. Raj; D. Reboredo Gil; Anna Subiel; G. H. Welsh; S. M. Wiggins; S. R. Yoffe; J. Farmer; Constantin Aniculaesei; E. Brunetti; X. Yang; R. Heathcote; G. Nersisyan; Ciaran Lewis; A. Pukhov; João Dias; D. A. Jaroszynski

Raman amplification arising from the excitation of a density echelon in plasma could lead to amplifiers that significantly exceed current power limits of conventional laser media. Here we show that 1–100 J pump pulses can amplify picojoule seed pulses to nearly joule level. The extremely high gain also leads to significant amplification of backscattered radiation from “noise”, arising from stochastic plasma fluctuations that competes with externally injected seed pulses, which are amplified to similar levels at the highest pump energies. The pump energy is scattered into the seed at an oblique angle with 14 J sr−1, and net gains of more than eight orders of magnitude. The maximum gain coefficient, of 180 cm−1, exceeds high-power solid-state amplifying media by orders of magnitude. The observation of a minimum of 640 J sr−1 directly backscattered from noise, corresponding to ≈10% of the pump energy in the observation solid angle, implies potential overall efficiencies greater than 10%.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2006

Radiation sources based on laser-plasma interactions

D. A. Jaroszynski; R. Bingham; E. Brunetti; B. Ersfeld; J. G. Gallacher; van der Sb Bas Geer; R. C. Issac; S. P. Jamison; D. R. Jones; de Mj Marieke Loos; A. Lyachev; Vm Pavlov; Ajw Albert Reitsma; Ym Saveliev; G. Vieux; S. M. Wiggins

Plasma waves excited by intense laser beams can be harnessed to produce femtosecond duration bunches of electrons with relativistic energies. The very large electrostatic forces of plasma density wakes trailing behind an intense laser pulse provide field potentials capable of accelerating charged particles to high energies over very short distances, as high as 1 GeV in a few millimetres. The short length scale of plasma waves provides a means of developing very compact high-energy accelerators, which could form the basis of compact next-generation light sources with unique properties. Tuneable X-ray radiation and particle pulses with durations of the order of or less than 5 fs should be possible and would be useful for probing matter on unprecedented time and spatial scales. If developed to fruition this revolutionary technology could reduce the size and cost of light sources by three orders of magnitude and, therefore, provide powerful new tools to a large scientific community. We will discuss how a laser-driven plasma wakefield accelerator can be used to produce radiation with unique characteristics over a very large spectral range.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2003

Plasma characterization with terahertz time-domain measurements

S. P. Jamison; Jingling Shen; D. R. Jones; R. C. Issac; B. Ersfeld; D. Clark; D. A. Jaroszynski

Terahertz time–domain spectral techniques are applied to the characterization of a He discharge plasma. Electro-optically sampling of the electric field of a quasi-unipolar terahertz pulse transmitted through the plasma has allowed both the real and imaginary parts of the plasma permittivity to be simultaneously measured over a large spectral range. The plasma density and the collisional frequency are determined within a 30 ps duration measurement window. An anomalously high collisional frequency has been measured.


New Journal of Physics | 2011

Chirped pulse Raman amplification in plasma

G. Vieux; A Lyachev; X. Yang; B. Ersfeld; John Patrick Farmer; E. Brunetti; R. C. Issac; G. Raj; G. H. Welsh; S. M. Wiggins; D. A. Jaroszynski

Raman amplification in plasma has been proposed to be a promising method of amplifying short radiation pulses. Here, we investigate chirped pulse Raman amplification (CPRA) where the pump pulse is chirped and leads to spatiotemporal distributed gain, which exhibits superradiant scaling in the linear regime, usually associated with the nonlinear pump depletion and Compton amplification regimes. CPRA has the potential to serve as a high-efficiency high-fidelity amplifier/compressor stage.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2010

High quality electron beams from a laser wakefield accelerator

S. M. Wiggins; Richard P. Shanks; R. C. Issac; G. H. Welsh; M. P. Anania; E. Brunetti; G. Vieux; S. Cipiccia; B. Ersfeld; M. R. Islam; R. T. L. Burgess; G. G. Manahan; Constantin Aniculaesei; W. A. Gillespie; A. M. MacLeod; D. A. Jaroszynski

Very stable, high quality electron beams (current ∼ 10 kA, energy spread < 1%, emittance ∼ 1π mm mrad) have been generated in a laser-plasma accelerator driven by 25 TW femtosecond laser pulses.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2000

The Strathclyde terahertz to optical pulse source (TOPS)

D. A. Jaroszynski; B. Ersfeld; Gerard Giraud; S. P. Jamison; D. R. Jones; R. C. Issac; B.M.W. McNeil; A. D. R. Phelps; G.R.M. Robb; H. Sandison; G. Vieux; S. M. Wiggins; Klaas Wynne

We describe the newly created free-electron laser facility situated at the University of Strathclyde in Scotland, which will produce ultra-short pulses of high-power electromagnetic radiation in the terahertz frequency range. The FEL will be based on a 4 MeV photoinjector producing picosecond 1 nC electron pulses and driven by a frequency tripled Ti:sapphire laser thus ensuring synchronism with conventional laser based tuneable sources. A synchronised multi-terawatt Ti:sapphire laser amplifier will be used in the study of laser/plasma/electron beam interactions and as a plasma based X-ray source. A substantial user commitment has already been made in support of the programme.


Physics of Plasmas | 2004

Ultra hard x rays from krypton clusters heated by intense laser fields

R. C. Issac; G. Vieux; B. Ersfeld; E. Brunetti; S. P. Jamison; J. G. Gallacher; D. Clark; D. A. Jaroszynski

The interaction of ultrashort laser pulses with krypton clusters at intensity up to 1.3×1018 Wcm−2 has been investigated. Intense Kα and Kβ emission from krypton at 12.66 and 14.1 keV, respectively, has been observed using conventional solid state x-ray detectors. The measured x-ray spectra have broad bremsstrahlung continuum reaching to photon energies up to 45 keV, with evidence that approximately 10% of electrons that are heated to very high electron temperatures, which is consistent with a two-temperature electron distribution. This is ascribed to the presence of a hot electron population, similar to that found in laser–solid interactions. The highest laser energy to x-ray conversion efficiency observed is 9.2×10−7, which is equivalent to 45 nJ x-ray pulse energy from the 12.66 keV krypton Kα transition.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2012

A tuneable ultra-compact high-power, ultra-short pulsed, bright gamma-ray source based on bremsstrahlung radiation from laser-plasma accelerated electrons

S. Cipiccia; S. M. Wiggins; Richard P. Shanks; M. R. Islam; G. Vieux; R. C. Issac; E. Brunetti; B. Ersfeld; G. H. Welsh; M. P. Anania; D. Maneuski; Nuno Lemos; R. A. Bendoyro; Pattathil Rajeev; P. S. Foster; N. Bourgeois; T. Ibbotson; P. A. Walker; V. O’Shea; João Dias; D. A. Jaroszynski

The laser driven plasma wakefield accelerator is a very compact source of high energy electrons. When the quasi-monoenergetic beam from these accelerators passes through dense material, high energy bremsstrahlung photons are emitted in a collimated beam with high flux. We show how a source based on this emission process can produce more than 109 photons per pulse with a mean energy of 10 MeV. We present experimental results that show the feasibility of this method of producing high energy photons and compare the experimental results with GEANT4 Montecarlo simulations, which also give the scaling required to evaluate its suitability as method to produce radioisotopes via photo-nuclear reactions or for imaging applications.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Linearly tapered discharge capillary waveguides as a medium for a laser plasma wakefield accelerator

S. Abuazoum; S. M. Wiggins; B. Ersfeld; K. Hart; G. Vieux; X. Yang; G. H. Welsh; R. C. Issac; M. P. Reijnders; D. R. Jones; D. A. Jaroszynski

Gas-filled capillary discharge waveguides are commonly used as media for plasma wakefield accelerators. We show that effective waveguides can be manufactured using a femtosecond laser micromachining technique to produce a linearly tapered plasma density, which enables the energy of the accelerator to be enhanced significantly. A laser guiding efficiency in excess of 82% at sub-relativistic intensities has been demonstrated in a 40 mm long capillary with a diameter tapering from 320 μm to 270 μm, which gives rise to an on-axis, time-averaged plasma density that varies from 1.0 × 1018 cm−3 to 1.6 × 1018 cm−3.


New Journal of Physics | 2015

Strong terahertz emission from electromagnetic diffusion near cutoff in plasma

M-H. Cho; Y-K Kim; H. Suk; B. Ersfeld; D. A. Jaroszynski; Min Sup Hur

A new mechanism for electromagnetic emission in the terahertz (THz) frequency regime from laser-plasma interactions is described. A localized and long-lasting transverse current is produced by two counter-propagating short laser pulses in weakly magnetized plasma. We show that the electromagnetic wave radiating from this current source, even though its frequency is close to cut-off of the ambient plasma, grows and diffuses towards the plasma-vacuum boundary, emitting a strong monochromatic THz wave. With driving laser pulses of moderate power, the THz wave has a field strength of tens of MV m−1, a frequency of a few THz and a quasi-continuous power that exceeds all previous monochromatic THz sources. The novelty of the mechanism lies in a diffusing electromagnetic wave close to cut-off, which is modelled by a continuously driven complex diffusion equation.

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E. Brunetti

University of Strathclyde

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G. Vieux

University of Strathclyde

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G. H. Welsh

University of Strathclyde

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R. C. Issac

University of Strathclyde

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S. Cipiccia

University of Strathclyde

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M. R. Islam

University of Strathclyde

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S. M. Wiggins

University of Strathclyde

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G. Raj

University of Strathclyde

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M. P. Anania

University of Strathclyde

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