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Dive into the research topics where G. Dyer is active.

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Featured researches published by G. Dyer.


Nature Communications | 2013

Quasi-monoenergetic laser-plasma acceleration of electrons to 2 GeV

Xiaoming Wang; Rafal Zgadzaj; Neil Fazel; Zhengyan Li; S. A. Yi; Xi Zhang; Watson Henderson; Yen-Yu Chang; R. Korzekwa; Hai-En Tsai; Chih-Hao Pai; H. J. Quevedo; G. Dyer; E. Gaul; Mikael Martinez; Aaron Bernstein; Teddy Borger; M. Spinks; Michael Donovan; Vladimir Khudik; Gennady Shvets; T. Ditmire; M. C. Downer

Laser-plasma accelerators of only a centimetre’s length have produced nearly monoenergetic electron bunches with energy as high as 1 GeV. Scaling these compact accelerators to multi-gigaelectronvolt energy would open the prospect of building X-ray free-electron lasers and linear colliders hundreds of times smaller than conventional facilities, but the 1 GeV barrier has so far proven insurmountable. Here, by applying new petawatt laser technology, we produce electron bunches with a spectrum prominently peaked at 2 GeV with only a few per cent energy spread and unprecedented sub-milliradian divergence. Petawatt pulses inject ambient plasma electrons into the laser-driven accelerator at much lower density than was previously possible, thereby overcoming the principal physical barriers to multi-gigaelectronvolt acceleration: dephasing between laser-driven wake and accelerating electrons and laser pulse erosion. Simulations indicate that with improvements in the laser-pulse focus quality, acceleration to nearly 10 GeV should be possible with the available pulse energy.


Applied Optics | 2010

Demonstration of a 1.1 petawatt laser based on a hybrid optical parametric chirped pulse amplification/mixed Nd:glass amplifier

E. Gaul; Mikael Martinez; Joel Blakeney; Axel Jochmann; Martin Ringuette; Doug Hammond; Ted Borger; Ramiro Escamilla; Skylar Douglas; Watson Henderson; G. Dyer; Alvin C. Erlandson; R.R. Cross; John A. Caird; Christopher A. Ebbers; T. Ditmire

We present the design and performance of the Texas Petawatt Laser, which produces a 186 J 167 fs pulse based on the combination of optical parametric chirped pulse amplification (OPCPA) and mixed Nd:glass amplification. OPCPA provides the majority of the gain and is used to broaden and shape the seed spectrum, while amplification in Nd:glass accounts for >99% of the final pulse energy. Compression is achieved with highly efficient multilayer dielectric gratings.


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


Physics of Plasmas | 2007

Hot Electron and X-ray Production from Intense Laser Irradiation of Wavelength-Scale Polystyrene Spheres

H. A. Sumeruk; S. Kneip; D. R. Symes; I.V. Churina; A. V. Belolipetski; G. Dyer; J. Landry; G. Bansal; Aaron Bernstein; Thomas D. Donnelly; Anupam Karmakar; A. Pukhov; T. Ditmire

Hot electron and x-ray production from solid targets coated with polystyrene-spheres which are irradiated with high-contrast, 100fs, 400nm light pulses at intensity up to 2×1017W∕cm2 have been studied. The peak hard x-ray signal from uncoated fused silica targets is an order of magnitude smaller than the signal from targets coated with submicron sized spheres. The temperature of the x-rays in the case of sphere-coated targets is twice as hot as that of uncoated glass. A sphere-size scan of the x-ray yield and observation of a peak in both the x-ray production and temperature at a sphere diameter of 0.26μm, indicate that these results are consistent with Mie enhancements of the laser field at the sphere surface and multipass stochastic heating of the hot electrons in the oscillating laser field. These results also match well with particle-in-cell simulations of the interaction.


Scientific Reports | 2015

High e+/e– ratio dense pair creation with 1021W.cm–2 laser irradiating solid targets

Edison P. Liang; Taylor Clarke; Alexander Henderson; Wen Fu; W. Lo; Devin Taylor; Petr Chaguine; Shaochuan Zhou; Y. Hua; X. Cen; Xin Wang; J. Kao; H. Hasson; G. Dyer; Kristina Serratto; Nathan Riley; Michael Donovan; T. Ditmire

We report results of new pair creation experiments using ~100 Joule pulses of the Texas Petawatt Laser to irradiate solid gold and platinum targets, with intensities up to ~1.9 × 1021 W.cm−2 and pulse durations as short as ~130 fs. Positron to electron (e+/e−) ratios >15% were observed for many thick disk and rod targets, with the highest e+/e− ratio reaching ~50% for a Pt rod. The inferred pair yield was ~ few ×1010 with emerging pair density reaching ~1015/cm3 so that the pair skin depth becomes < pair jet transverse size. These results represent major milestones towards the goal of creating a significant quantity of dense pair-dominated plasmas with e+/e− approaching 100% and pair skin depth ≪ pair plasma size, which will have wide-ranging applications to astrophysics and fundamental physics.


Physics of Plasmas | 2008

Hot electron generation from intense laser irradiation of microtipped cone and wedge targets

Byoung-ick Cho; G. Dyer; S. Kneip; S. Pikuz; D. R. Symes; Aaron Bernstein; Y. Sentoku; N. Renard-Le Galloudec; T. E. Cowan; T. Ditmire

X-ray production from the interaction of femtosecond laser pulses focused to relativistic intensity into re-entrant targets etched into silicon has been investigated. Kα and hard x-ray yields were compared when the laser was focused into pyramidal shaped cone targets and wedge shaped targets. Hot electron production is highest in the wedge targets irradiated with transverse polarization, though Kα is maximized with wedge targets and parallel polarization. These results are explained with particle-in-cell simulations.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Calibration of the neutron detectors for the cluster fusion experiment on the Texas Petawatt Laser.

W. Bang; H. J. Quevedo; G. Dyer; J. Rougk; I. Kim; M. McCormick; Aaron Bernstein; T. Ditmire

Three types of neutron detectors (plastic scintillation detectors, indium activation detectors, and CR-39 track detectors) were calibrated for the measurement of 2.45 MeV DD fusion neutron yields from the deuterium cluster fusion experiment on the Texas Petawatt Laser. A Cf-252 neutron source and 2.45 MeV fusion neutrons generated from laser-cluster interaction were used as neutron sources. The scintillation detectors were calibrated such that they can detect up to 10(8) DD fusion neutrons per shot in current mode under high electromagnetic pulse environments. Indium activation detectors successfully measured neutron yields as low as 10(4) per shot and up to 10(11) neutrons. The use of a Cf-252 neutron source allowed cross calibration of CR-39 and indium activation detectors at high neutron yields (∼10(11)). The CR-39 detectors provided consistent measurements of the total neutron yield of Cf-252 when a modified detection efficiency of 4.6×10(-4) was used. The combined use of all three detectors allowed for a detection range of 10(4) to 10(11) neutrons per shot.


Physics of Plasmas | 2017

Laser-plasmas in the relativistic-transparency regime: Science and applications

Juan C. Fernandez; D. Cort Gautier; Chengkung Huang; S. Palaniyappan; B. J. Albright; W. Bang; G. Dyer; Andrea Favalli; James F. Hunter; Jacob Mendez; Markus Roth; Martyn T. Swinhoe; P. A. Bradley; O. Deppert; Michelle A. Espy; Katerina Falk; N. Guler; Christopher E. Hamilton; B. M. Hegelich; Daniela Henzlova; Kiril Dimitrov Ianakiev; Metodi Iliev; R. P. Johnson; A. Kleinschmidt; Adrian S. Losko; E. McCary; M. Mocko; R. O. Nelson; R. Roycroft; Miguel A. Santiago Cordoba

Laser-plasma interactions in the novel regime of relativistically induced transparency (RIT) have been harnessed to generate intense ion beams efficiently with average energies exceeding 10 MeV/nucleon (>100 MeV for protons) at “table-top” scales in experiments at the LANL Trident Laser. By further optimization of the laser and target, the RIT regime has been extended into a self-organized plasma mode. This mode yields an ion beam with much narrower energy spread while maintaining high ion energy and conversion efficiency. This mode involves self-generation of persistent high magnetic fields (∼104 T, according to particle-in-cell simulations of the experiments) at the rear-side of the plasma. These magnetic fields trap the laser-heated multi-MeV electrons, which generate a high localized electrostatic field (∼0.1 T V/m). After the laser exits the plasma, this electric field acts on a highly structured ion-beam distribution in phase space to reduce the energy spread, thus separating acceleration and energy-spread reduction. Thus, ion beams with narrow energy peaks at up to 18 MeV/nucleon are generated reproducibly with high efficiency (≈5%). The experimental demonstration has been done with 0.12 PW, high-contrast, 0.6 ps Gaussian 1.053 μm laser pulses irradiating planar foils up to 250 nm thick at 2–8 × 1020 W/cm2. These ion beams with co-propagating electrons have been used on Trident for uniform volumetric isochoric heating to generate and study warm-dense matter at high densities. These beam plasmas have been directed also at a thick Ta disk to generate a directed, intense point-like Bremsstrahlung source of photons peaked at ∼2 MeV and used it for point projection radiography of thick high density objects. In addition, prior work on the intense neutron beam driven by an intense deuterium beam generated in the RIT regime has been extended. Neutron spectral control by means of a flexible converter-disk design has been demonstrated, and the neutron beam has been used for point-projection imaging of thick objects. The plans and prospects for further improvements and applications are also discussed.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Fast neutron production from lithium converters and laser driven protons

M. Storm; Sheng Jiang; D. Wertepny; Chris Orban; John T. Morrison; C. Willis; E. McCary; P.X. Belancourt; Joseph Snyder; Enam Chowdhury; W. Bang; E. Gaul; G. Dyer; T. Ditmire; R. R. Freeman; K. U. Akli

Experiments to generate neutrons from the 7Li(p,n)7Be reaction with 60 J, 180 fs laser pulses have been performed at the Texas Petawatt Laser Facility at the University of Texas at Austin. The protons were accelerated from the rear surface of a thin target membrane using the target-normal-sheath-acceleration mechanism. The neutrons were generated in nuclear reactions caused by the subsequent proton bombardment of a pure lithium foil of natural isotopic abundance. The neutron energy ranged up to 2.9 MeV. The total yield was estimated to be 1.6 × 107 neutrons per steradian. An extreme ultra-violet light camera, used to image the target rear surface, correlated variations in the proton yield and peak energy to target rear surface ablation. Calculations using the hydrodynamics code FLASH indicated that the ablation resulted from a laser pre-pulse of prolonged intensity. The ablation severely limited the proton acceleration and neutron yield.


Journal of Modern Optics | 2003

Isochoric heating of solid aluminium with picosecond X-ray pulses

G. Dyer; R. Sheppherd; J. Kuba; Ernst E. Fill; Alan Wootton; P. Patel; D. Price; T. Ditmire

Abstract High-energy-density matter in quite unique parameter regimes can be studied using an intense laser pulse to heat isochorically an initially cold solid density target. Such isochoric heating experiments permit study of the properties, such as the equation of state, of heated matter. One of the principal challenges of these experiments is to heat sufficiently thick layers so that they will be inertially confined over times scales sufficient for equilibration, times that are often many picoseconds, even at these high densities. One approach to this problem is to heat a solid target not with the laser pulse directly, which deposits its energy only over a few nanometres, but to heat with penetrating X-rays. In this paper, we present preliminary results where such ultrafast X-ray heating is demonstrated using a short-pulse laser-driven silicon Kα source to heat a layer of solid density aluminium.

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T. Ditmire

University of Texas at Austin

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Aaron Bernstein

University of Texas at Austin

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E. Gaul

University of Texas at Austin

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Michael Donovan

University of Texas at Austin

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Mikael Martinez

University of Texas at Austin

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H. J. Quevedo

University of Texas at Austin

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W. Bang

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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B. M. Hegelich

University of Texas at Austin

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M. Spinks

University of Texas at Austin

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M. C. Downer

University of Texas at Austin

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