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

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Featured researches published by G. G. Scott.


New Journal of Physics | 2015

Optimization of plasma mirror reflectivity and optical quality using double laser pulses

G. G. Scott; V. Bagnoud; C. Brabetz; R. J. Clarke; J. S. Green; R. Heathcote; Haydn Powell; B. Zielbauer; T. D. Arber; P. McKenna; D. Neely

We measure a record 96 ±2.5% specularly reflected energy fraction from an interaction with a plasma mirror (PM) surface preionized by a controlled prepulse and find that the optical quality is dependent on the inter pulse time delay. Simulations show that the main pulse reflected energy is a strong function of plasma density scale length, which increases with the time delay and reaches a peak reflectivity for a scale length of 0.3 μm, which is achieved here for a pulse separation time of 3 ps. It is found that the incident laser quasi near field intensity distribution leads to nonuniformities in this plasma expansion and consequent critical surface position distribution. The PM optical quality is found to be governed by the resultant perturbations in the critical surface position, which become larger with inter pulse time delay.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Multi-pulse enhanced laser ion acceleration using plasma half cavity targets

G. G. Scott; J. S. Green; V. Bagnoud; C. Brabetz; C. M. Brenner; D. C. Carroll; D. A. MacLellan; A. P. L. Robinson; Markus Roth; C. Spindloe; F. Wagner; B. Zielbauer; P. McKenna; D. Neely

We report on a plasma half cavity target design for laser driven ion acceleration that enhances the laser to proton energy conversion efficiency and has been found to modify the low energy region of the proton spectrum. The target design utilizes the high fraction of laser energy reflected from an ionized surface and refocuses it such that a double pulse interaction is attained. We report on numerical simulations and experimental results demonstrating that conversion efficiencies can be doubled, compared to planar foil interactions, when the secondary pulse is delivered within picoseconds of the primary pulse.


New Journal of Physics | 2016

Buffered high charge spectrally-peaked proton beams in the relativistic-transparency regime

Nicholas Dover; C. A. J. Palmer; Matthew Streeter; H. Ahmed; B. Albertazzi; M. Borghesi; D. C. Carroll; Jean-Noël Fuchs; R. Heathcote; P. Hilz; K. F. Kakolee; S. Kar; R. Kodama; A. Kon; D. A. MacLellan; P. McKenna; S. R. Nagel; D. Neely; M. Notley; M. Nakatsutsumi; R. Prasad; G. G. Scott; M. Tampo; M. Zepf; Jörg Schreiber; Z. Najmudin

Spectrally-peaked proton beams of high charge (E-p approximate to 8 MeV, Delta E approximate to 4 MeV, N approximate to 50 nC) have been observed from the interaction of an intense laser (> 10(19) W cm(-2)) with ultrathin CH foils, as measured by spectrally-resolved full beam profiles. These beams are reproducibly generated for foil thicknesses 5-100 nm, and exhibit narrowing divergence with decreasing target thickness down to approximate to 8 degrees for 5 nm. Simulations demonstrate that the narrow energy spread feature is a result of buffered acceleration of protons. The radiation pressure at the front of the target results in asymmetric sheath fields which permeate throughout the target, causing preferential forward acceleration. Due to their higher charge-to-mass ratio, the protons outrun a carbon plasma driven in the relativistic transparency regime.


Nature Communications | 2016

Towards optical polarization control of laser-driven proton acceleration in foils undergoing relativistic transparency

Bruno Gonzalez-Izquierdo; M. King; Robert Gray; Richard Wilson; R. J. Dance; Haydn Powell; D. A. MacLellan; John McCreadie; N. M. H. Butler; S. Hawkes; J. S. Green; C. D. Murphy; Luca C. Stockhausen; D. C. Carroll; N. Booth; G. G. Scott; M. Borghesi; D. Neely; P. McKenna

Control of the collective response of plasma particles to intense laser light is intrinsic to relativistic optics, the development of compact laser-driven particle and radiation sources, as well as investigations of some laboratory astrophysics phenomena. We recently demonstrated that a relativistic plasma aperture produced in an ultra-thin foil at the focus of intense laser radiation can induce diffraction, enabling polarization-based control of the collective motion of plasma electrons. Here we show that under these conditions the electron dynamics are mapped into the beam of protons accelerated via strong charge-separation-induced electrostatic fields. It is demonstrated experimentally and numerically via 3D particle-in-cell simulations that the degree of ellipticity of the laser polarization strongly influences the spatial-intensity distribution of the beam of multi-MeV protons. The influence on both sheath-accelerated and radiation pressure-accelerated protons is investigated. This approach opens up a potential new route to control laser-driven ion sources.


New Journal of Physics | 2014

Azimuthal asymmetry in collective electron dynamics in relativistically transparent laser–foil interactions

Robert Gray; D. A. MacLellan; Bruno Gonzalez-Izquierdo; Haydn Powell; D. C. Carroll; C. D. Murphy; Luca C. Stockhausen; Dean Rusby; G. G. Scott; Richard Wilson; N. Booth; D. R. Symes; S. Hawkes; R. Torres; M. Borghesi; D. Neely; P. McKenna

Asymmetry in the collective dynamics of ponderomotively-driven electrons in the interaction of an ultraintense laser pulse with a relativistically transparent target is demonstrated experimentally. The 2D profile of the beam of accelerated electrons is shown to change from an ellipse aligned along the laser polarization direction in the case of limited transparency, to a double-lobe structure aligned perpendicular to it when a significant fraction of the laser pulse co-propagates with the electrons. The temporally-resolved dynamics of the interaction are investigated via particle-in-cell simulations. The results provide new insight into the collective response of charged particles to intense laser fields over an extended interaction volume, which is important for a wide range of applications, and in particular for the development of promising new ultraintense laser-driven ion acceleration mechanisms involving ultrathin target foils.


Journal of Plasma Physics | 2015

Measurement of the Angle, Temperature and Flux of Fast Electrons Emitted from Intense Laser-Solid Interactions

Dean Rusby; L. Wilson; Robert Gray; R. J. Dance; N. M. H. Butler; D. A. MacLellan; G. G. Scott; V. Bagnoud; B. Zielbauer; P. McKenna; D. Neely

High-intensity laser-solid interactions generate relativistic electrons, as well as high-energy (multi-MeV) ions and X-rays. The directionality, spectra and total number of electrons that escape atarget-foil is dependent on the absorption, transport and rear-side sheath conditions. Measuring the electrons escaping the target will aid in improving our understanding of these absorption processes and the rear-surface sheath fields that retard the escaping electrons and accelerate ions via the target normal sheath acceleration (TNSA) mechanism. A comprehensive Geant4 study was performed to help analyse measurements made with a wrap-around diagnostic that surrounds the target and uses differential filtering with a FUJI-film image plate detector. The contribution of secondary sources such as X-rays and protons to the measured signal have been taken into account to aid in the retrieval of the electron signal. Angular and spectral data from a high-intensity laser-solid interaction are presented and accompanied by simulations. The total number of emitted electrons has been measured as 2.6 × 1013 with an estimated total energy of 12 ± 1 J from a 100 mu;m Cu target with140 J of incident laser energy during a 4 × 1020 W cm-2 interaction.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2016

In-situ formation of solidified hydrogen thin-membrane targets using a pulse tube cryocooler

S. Astbury; S. Bedacht; P.A. Brummitt; D. C. Carroll; Robert J. Clarke; S Crisp; Cristina Hernandez-Gomez; P. Holligan; S. Hook; J S Merchan; D. Neely; A. Ortner; D Rathbone; P Rice; G. Schaumann; G. G. Scott; C. Spindloe; S Spurdle; A. Tebartz; S Tomlinson; F. Wagner; M. Borghesi; Markus Roth; M. Tolley

An account is given of the Central Laser Facilitys work to produce a cryogenic hydrogen targetry system using a pulse tube cryocooler. Due to the increasing demand for low Z thin laser targets, CLF (in collaboration with TUD) have been developing a system which allows the production of solid hydrogen membranes by engineering a design which can achieve this remotely; enabling the gas injection, condensation and solidification of hydrogen without compromising the vacuum of the target chamber. A dynamic sealing mechanism was integrated which allows targets to be grown and then remotely exposed to open vacuum for laser interaction. Further research was conducted on the survivability of the cryogenic targets which concluded that a warm gas effect causes temperature spiking when exposing the solidified hydrogen to the outer vacuum. This effect was shown to be mitigated by improving the pumping capacity of the environment and reducing the minimum temperature obtainable on the target mount. This was achieved by developing a two-stage radiation shield encased with superinsulating blanketing; reducing the base temperature from 14 ± 0.5 K to 7.2 ± 0.2 K about the coldhead as well as improving temperature control stability following the installation of a high-performance temperature controller and sensor apparatus. The system was delivered experimentally and in July 2014 the first laser shots were taken upon hydrogen targets in the Vulcan TAP facility.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

High resolution Thomson Parabola Spectrometer for full spectral capture of multi-species ion beams

A. Alejo; S. Kar; A. Tebartz; H. Ahmed; S. Astbury; D. C. Carroll; J. Ding; D. Doria; A. Higginson; P. McKenna; N. Neumann; G. G. Scott; F. Wagner; Markus Roth; M. Borghesi

We report on the experimental characterisation of laser-driven ion beams using a Thomson Parabola Spectrometer (TPS) equipped with trapezoidally shaped electric plates, proposed by Gwynne et al. [Rev. Sci. Instrum. 85, 033304 (2014)]. While a pair of extended (30 cm long) electric plates was able to produce a significant increase in the separation between neighbouring ion species at high energies, deploying a trapezoidal design circumvented the spectral clipping at the low energy end of the ion spectra. The shape of the electric plate was chosen carefully considering, for the given spectrometer configuration, the range of detectable ion energies and species. Analytical tracing of the ion parabolas matches closely with the experimental data, which suggests a minimal effect of fringe fields on the escaping ions close to the wedged edge of the electrode. The analytical formulae were derived considering the relativistic correction required for the high energy ions to be characterised using such spectrometer.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2016

Recent developments in the Thomson Parabola Spectrometer diagnostic for laser-driven multi-species ion sources

A. Alejo; D. Gwynne; D. Doria; H. Ahmed; D. C. Carroll; R. J. Clarke; D. Neely; G. G. Scott; M. Borghesi; S. Kar

Ongoing developments in laser-driven ion acceleration warrant appropriate modifications to the standard Thomson Parabola Spectrometer (TPS) arrangement in order to match the diagnostic requirements associated to the particular and distinctive properties of laser-accelerated beams. Here we present an overview of recent developments by our group of the TPS diagnostic aimed to enhance the capability of diagnosing multi-species high-energy ion beams. In order to facilitate discrimination between ions with same Z/A, a recursive differential filtering technique was implemented at the TPS detector in order to allow only one of the overlapping ion species to reach the detector, across the entire energy range detectable by the TPS. In order to mitigate the issue of overlapping ion traces towards the higher energy part of the spectrum, an extended, trapezoidal electric plates design was envisaged, followed by its experimental demonstration. The design allows achieving high energy-resolution at high energies without sacrificing the lower energy part of the spectrum. Finally, a novel multi-pinhole TPS design is discussed, that would allow angularly resolved, complete spectral characterization of the high-energy, multi-species ion beams.


Laser and Particle Beams | 2013

Fast electron transport patterns in intense laser-irradiated solids diagnosed by modeling measured multi-MeV proton beams

D. A. MacLellan; D. C. Carroll; Robert Gray; N. Booth; Bruno Izquierdo; Haydn Powell; G. G. Scott; D. Neely; P. McKenna

The measured spatial-intensity distribution of the beam of protons accelerated from the rear side of a solid target irradiated by an intense (>10 Wcm) laser pulse provides a diagnostic of the two-dimensional fast electron density profile at the target rear surface and thus the fast electron beam transport pattern within the target. An analytical model is developed, accounting for rear-surface fast electron sheath dynamics, ionization and projection of the resulting beam of protons. The sensitivity of the spatial-intensity distribution of the proton beam to the fast electron density distribution is investigated. An annular fast electron beam transport pattern with filamentary structure is inferred for the case of a thick diamond target irradiated at a peak laser intensity of 6 × 10 Wcm.

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D. Neely

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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P. McKenna

University of Strathclyde

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D. C. Carroll

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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D. A. MacLellan

University of Strathclyde

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Haydn Powell

University of Strathclyde

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M. Borghesi

Queen's University Belfast

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Dean Rusby

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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N. Booth

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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J. S. Green

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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