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Dive into the research topics where D. C. Gautier is active.

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Featured researches published by D. C. Gautier.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2009

Radiochromic film imaging spectroscopy of laser-accelerated proton beams

F. Nuernberg; Marius Schollmeier; E. Brambrink; A. Blazevic; D. C. Carroll; K. A. Flippo; D. C. Gautier; Matthias Geissel; K. Harres; B. M. Hegelich; Olle Lundh; K. Markey; P. McKenna; D. Neely; Jörg Schreiber; Markus Roth

This article reports on an experimental method to fully reconstruct laser-accelerated proton beam parameters called radiochromic film imaging spectroscopy (RIS). RIS allows for the characterization of proton beams concerning real and virtual source size, envelope- and microdivergence, normalized transverse emittance, phase space, and proton spectrum. This technique requires particular targets and a high resolution proton detector. Therefore thin gold foils with a microgrooved rear side were manufactured and characterized. Calibrated GafChromic radiochromic film (RCF) types MD-55, HS, and HD-810 in stack configuration were used as spatial and energy resolved film detectors. The principle of the RCF imaging spectroscopy was demonstrated at four different laser systems. This can be a method to characterize a laser system with respect to its proton-acceleration capability. In addition, an algorithm to calculate the spatial and energy resolved proton distribution has been developed and tested to get a better idea of laser-accelerated proton beams and their energy deposition with respect to further applications.


Laser and Particle Beams | 2007

Laser-driven ion accelerators: Spectral control, monoenergetic ions and new acceleration mechanisms

K. A. Flippo; B. M. Hegelich; B. J. Albright; L. Yin; D. C. Gautier; S. Letzring; M. Schollmeier; J. Schreiber; R. Schulze; Juan C. Fernandez

LosAlamos National Laboratory short pulse experiments have shown using various target cleaning techniques such that heavy ion beams of different charge states can be produced. Furthermore, by controlling the thickness of light ions on the rear of the target, monoenergetic ion pulses can be generated. The spectral shape of the accelerated particles can be controlled to yield a range of distributions, from Maxwellian to ones possessing a monoenergetic peak at high energy. The key lies in understanding and utilizing target surface chemistry. Careful monitoring and control of the surface properties and induction of reactions at different temperatures allows well defined source layers to be formed, which in turn lead to the desired energy spectra in the acceleration process. Theoretical considerations provide understanding of the process of monoenergetic ion production. In addition, numerical modeling has identified a new acceleration mechanism, the laser break-out afterburner that could potentially boost particle energies by up to two orders of magnitude for the same laser parameters. This mechanism may enable application of laser-accelerated ion beams to venues such as compact accelerators, tumor therapy, and ion fast ignition.


Physics of Plasmas | 2008

Increased efficiency of short-pulse laser-generated proton beams from novel flat-top cone targets

K. A. Flippo; E. d’Humières; S. A. Gaillard; J. Rassuchine; D. C. Gautier; M. Schollmeier; F. Nürnberg; J. L. Kline; J. Adams; B. J. Albright; M. S. Bakeman; K. Harres; R. P. Johnson; G. Korgan; S. Letzring; S. Malekos; N. Renard-LeGalloudec; Y. Sentoku; T. Shimada; Markus Roth; T. E. Cowan; Juan C. Fernandez; B. M. Hegelich

Ion-driven fast ignition (IFI) may have significant advantages over electron-driven FI due to the potentially large reduction in the amount of energy required for the ignition beam and the laser driver. Recent experiments at the Los Alamos National Laboratory’s Trident facility employing novel Au flat-top cone targets have produced a fourfold increase in laser-energy to ion-energy efficiency, a 13-fold increase in the number of ions above 10MeV, and a few times increase in the maximum ion energy compared to Au flat-foil targets. Compared to recently published scaling laws, these gains are even greater. If the efficiency scales with intensity in accordance to flat-foil scaling, then, with little modification, these targets can be used to generate the pulse of ions needed to ignite thermonuclear fusion in the fast ignitor scheme. A proton energy of at least 30MeV was measured from the flat-top cone targets, and particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations show that the maximum cutoff energy may be as high as 40–45MeV...


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Efficient carbon ion beam generation from laser-driven volume acceleration

D. Jung; L. Yin; B. J. Albright; D. C. Gautier; S. Letzring; B. Dromey; M. Yeung; Rainer Hörlein; R. C. Shah; S. Palaniyappan; K. Allinger; Jörg Schreiber; K. J. Bowers; H-C Wu; J. C. Fernandez; Dietrich Habs; B. M. Hegelich

Experimental data on laser-driven carbon C6+ ion acceleration with a peak intensity of 5???1020?W?cm?2 are presented and compared for opaque target normal sheath acceleration (TNSA) and relativistically transparent laser?plasma interactions. Particle numbers, peak ion energy and conversion efficiency have been investigated for target thicknesses from 50?nm to 25??m using unprecedented full spectral beam profile line-out measurements made using a novel high-resolution ion wide-angle spectrometer. For thicknesses of about 200?nm, particle numbers and peak energy increase to 5???1011 carbon C6+ particles between 33 and 700?MeV (60?MeV?u?1), which is a factor of five higher in particle number than that observed for targets with micron thickness. For 200?nm thick targets, we find that the peak conversion efficiency is 6% and that up to 55% of the target under the laser focal spot is accelerated to energies above 33?MeV. This contrasts with the results for targets with micron thickness, where surface acceleration with TNSA is dominant. The experimental findings are consistent with two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2011

Development of a high resolution and high dispersion Thomson parabola

D. Jung; Rainer Hörlein; Daniel Kiefer; S. Letzring; D. C. Gautier; U. Schramm; C. Hübsch; R. Öhm; B. J. Albright; Juan C. Fernandez; Dietrich Habs; B. M. Hegelich

Here, we report on the development of a novel high resolution and high dispersion Thomson parabola for simultaneously resolving protons and low-Z ions of more than 100 MeV/nucleon necessary to explore novel laser ion acceleration schemes. High electric and magnetic fields enable energy resolutions of ΔE∕E < 5% at 100 MeV/nucleon and impede premature merging of different ion species at low energies on the detector plane. First results from laser driven ion acceleration experiments performed at the Trident Laser Facility demonstrate high resolution and superior species and charge state separation of this novel Thomson parabola for ion energies of more than 30 MeV/nucleon.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Laser-driven ion acceleration from relativistically transparent nanotargets

B. M. Hegelich; I. Pomerantz; L. Yin; H.-C. Wu; D. Jung; B. J. Albright; D. C. Gautier; S. Letzring; S. Palaniyappan; R. C. Shah; K. Allinger; Rainer Hörlein; Jörg Schreiber; Dietrich Habs; Joel Blakeney; G. Dyer; L. Fuller; E. Gaul; E. Mccary; A. R. Meadows; C. Wang; T. Ditmire; J. C. Fernandez

Here we present experimental results on laser-driven ion accel- eration from relativistically transparent, overdense plasmas in the break-out afterburner (BOA) regime. Experiments were preformed at the Trident ultra-high contrast laser facility at Los Alamos National Laboratory, and at the Texas Petawatt laser facility, located in the University of Texas at Austin. It is shown that when the target becomes relativistically transparent to the laser, an epoch of dramatic acceleration of ions occurs that lasts until the electron density in the expanding target reduces to the critical density in the non-relativistic limit. For given laser parameters, the optimal target thickness yielding the highest maximum ion energy is one in which this time window for ion acceleration overlaps with the intensity peak of the laser pulse. A simple analytic model of relativistically induced transparency is presented for plasma expansion at the


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008

TRIDENT high-energy-density facility experimental capabilities and diagnostics

S. H. Batha; Robert Aragonez; F. Archuleta; Tom Archuleta; J. F. Benage; J. A. Cobble; Joseph Cowan; Valerie E. Fatherley; K. A. Flippo; D. C. Gautier; R. P. Gonzales; Scott R. Greenfield; B. M. Hegelich; T. R. Hurry; R. P. Johnson; J. L. Kline; S. Letzring; E. N. Loomis; F. E. Lopez; S. N. Luo; D. S. Montgomery; John A. Oertel; Dennis L. Paisley; S.-M. Reid; P. G. Sanchez; Achim Seifter; T. Shimada; J. Workman

The newly upgraded TRIDENT high-energy-density (HED) facility provides high-energy short-pulse laser-matter interactions with powers in excess of 200 TW and energies greater than 120 J. In addition, TRIDENT retains two long-pulse (nanoseconds to microseconds) beams that are available for simultaneous use in either the same experiment or a separate one. The facilitys flexibility is enhanced by the presence of two separate target chambers with a third undergoing commissioning. This capability allows the experimental configuration to be optimized by choosing the chamber with the most advantageous geometry and features. The TRIDENT facility also provides a wide range of standard instruments including optical, x-ray, and particle diagnostics. In addition, one chamber has a 10 in. manipulator allowing OMEGA and National Ignition Facility (NIF) diagnostics to be prototyped and calibrated.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Laser-driven 1 GeV carbon ions from preheated diamond targets in the break-out afterburner regime

D. Jung; L. Yin; D. C. Gautier; H.-C. Wu; S. Letzring; B. Dromey; R. C. Shah; S. Palaniyappan; T. Shimada; R. P. Johnson; Jörg Schreiber; Dietrich Habs; Juan C. Fernandez; B. M. Hegelich; B. J. Albright

Experimental data are presented for laser-driven carbon C6+ ion-acceleration, verifying 2D-PIC studies for multi-species targets in the Break-Out Afterburner regime. With Tridents ultra-high contrast at relativistic intensities of 5 × 1020 W/cm2 and nm-scale diamond targets, acceleration of carbon ions has been optimized by using target laser-preheating for removal of surface proton contaminants. Using a high-resolution wide angle spectrometer, carbon C6+ ion energies exceeding 1 GeV or 83 MeV/amu have been measured, which is a 40% increase in maximum ion energy over uncleaned targets. These results are consistent with kinetic plasma modeling and analytic theory.


Nuclear Fusion | 2011

Experimental demonstration of particle energy, conversion efficiency and spectral shape required for ion-based fast ignition

B. M. Hegelich; D. Jung; B. J. Albright; Juan C. Fernandez; D. C. Gautier; Chengkun Huang; Thomas J. T. Kwan; S. Letzring; S. Palaniyappan; R. C. Shah; H.-C. Wu; L. Yin; A. Henig; Rainer Hörlein; Daniel Kiefer; Jörg Schreiber; X.Q. Yan; T. Tajima; D. Habs; B. Dromey; J.J. Honrubia

Research on fusion fast ignition (FI) initiated by laser-driven ion beams has made substantial progress in the last years. Compared with electrons, FI based on a beam of quasi-monoenergetic ions has the advantage of a more localized energy deposition, and stiffer particle transport, bringing the required total beam energy close to the theoretical minimum. Due to short pulse laser drive, the ion beam can easily deliver the 200 TW power required to ignite the compressed D–T fuel. In integrated calculations we recently simulated ion-based FI targets with high fusion gain targets and a proof of principle experiment [1]. These simulations identify three key requirements for the success of ion-driven fast ignition (IFI): (1) the generation of a sufficiently high-energetic ion beam (≈400–500 MeV for C), with (2) less than 20% energy spread at (3) more than 10% conversion efficiency of laser to beam energy. Here we present for the first time new experimental results, demonstrating all three parameters in separate experiments. Using diamond nanotargets and ultrahigh contrast laser pulses we were able to demonstrate >500 MeV carbon ions, as well as carbon pulses with ΔE/E < 20%. The first measurements put the total conversion efficiency of laser light into high energy carbon ions on the order of 10%.


Nature Communications | 2015

Efficient quasi-monoenergetic ion beams from laser-driven relativistic plasmas

Sasi Palaniyappan; Chengkun Huang; D. C. Gautier; Christopher E. Hamilton; Miguel A. Santiago; C. Kreuzer; Adam B Sefkow; Rahul Shah; Juan C. Fernandez

Table-top laser–plasma ion accelerators have many exciting applications, many of which require ion beams with simultaneous narrow energy spread and high conversion efficiency. However, achieving these requirements has been elusive. Here we report the experimental demonstration of laser-driven ion beams with narrow energy spread and energies up to 18 MeV per nucleon and ∼5% conversion efficiency (that is 4 J out of 80-J laser). Using computer simulations we identify a self-organizing scheme that reduces the ion energy spread after the laser exits the plasma through persisting self-generated plasma electric (∼1012 V m−1) and magnetic (∼104 T) fields. These results contribute to the development of next generation compact accelerators suitable for many applications such as isochoric heating for ion-fast ignition and producing warm dense matter for basic science.

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Juan C. Fernandez

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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B. M. Hegelich

University of Texas at Austin

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R. P. Johnson

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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S. Letzring

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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D. Jung

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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K. A. Flippo

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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T. Shimada

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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B. J. Albright

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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R. C. Shah

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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S. Palaniyappan

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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