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Dive into the research topics where H. J. Quevedo is active.

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Featured researches published by H. J. Quevedo.


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.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2011

Microstructure dependence of dynamic fracture and yielding in aluminum and an aluminum alloy at strain rates of 2 × 106 s−1 and faster

D. A. Dalton; Daniel L. Worthington; Paul A. Sherek; Nicholas A. Pedrazas; H. J. Quevedo; Aaron Bernstein; Patrick K. Rambo; Jens Schwarz; Aaron Edens; Matthias Geissel; I. C. Smith; Eric M. Taleff; T. Ditmire

Experiments investigating fracture and resistance to plastic deformation at fast strain rates (>106 s−1) were performed via laser ablation on thin sheets of aluminum and aluminum alloys. Single crystal high purity aluminum (Al-HP) and a single crystal 1100 series aluminum alloy (AA1100) were prepared to investigate the role of impurity particles. Specimens of aluminum alloy +3 wt. % Mg (Al+3Mg) at three different grain sizes were also studied to determine the effect of grain size. In the present experiments, high purity aluminum (Al-HP) exhibited the highest spall strength over 1100 series aluminum alloy (AA1100) and Al+3Mg. Fracture characterization and particle analysis revealed that fracture was initiated in the presence of particles associated with impurity content in the AA1100 and at both grain boundaries and particles in Al+3Mg. The Al+3Mg specimens exhibited the greatest resistance to plastic deformation likely resulting from the presence of magnesium atoms. The Al-HP and AA1100, both lacking a st...


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.


Journal of Plasma Physics | 2012

Self-injected petawatt laser-driven plasma electron acceleration in 10 17 cm −3 plasma

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

We report observation of electron self-injection and acceleration in a plasma accelerator driven by the Texas petawatt laser at 10<sup>17</sup> cm<sup>−3</sup> plasma density, an order of magnitude lower density than previous self-injected laser-plasma accelerators.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Optimum laser intensity for the production of energetic deuterium ions from laser-cluster interaction

W. Bang; G. Dyer; H. J. Quevedo; Aaron Bernstein; E. Gaul; J. Rougk; Franki Aymond; Michael Donovan; T. Ditmire

We measured, using Petawatt-level pulses, the average ion energy and neutron yield in high-intensity laser interactions with molecular clusters as a function of laser intensity. The interaction volume over which fusion occurred (1–10 mm3) was larger than previous investigations, owing to the high laser power. Possible effects of prepulses were examined by implementing a pair of plasma mirrors. Our results show an optimum laser intensity for the production of energetic deuterium ions both with and without the use of the plasma mirrors. We measured deuterium plasmas with 14 keV average ion energies, which produced 7.2 × 106 and 1.6 × 107 neutrons in a single shot with and without plasma mirrors, respectively. The measured neutron yields qualitatively matched the expected yields calculated using a cylindrical plasma model.


Physical Review E | 2013

Experimental study of fusion neutron and proton yields produced by petawatt-laser-irradiated D2-3He or CD4-3He clustering gases

W. Bang; M. Barbui; A. Bonasera; H. J. Quevedo; G. Dyer; Aaron Bernstein; K. Hagel; K. Schmidt; E. Gaul; Michael Donovan; F. Consoli; R. De Angelis; P. Andreoli; M. Barbarino; S. Kimura; M. Mazzocco; Joseph Natowitz; T. Ditmire

We report on experiments in which the Texas Petawatt laser irradiated a mixture of deuterium or deuterated methane clusters and helium-3 gas, generating three types of nuclear fusion reactions: D(d,^{3}He)n, D(d,t)p, and ^{3}He(d,p)^{4}He. We measured the yields of fusion neutrons and protons from these reactions and found them to agree with yields based on a simple cylindrical plasma model using known cross sections and measured plasma parameters. Within our measurement errors, the fusion products were isotropically distributed. Plasma temperatures, important for the cross sections, were determined by two independent methods: (1) deuterium ion time of flight and (2) utilizing the ratio of neutron yield to proton yield from D(d,^{3}He)n and ^{3}He(d,p)^{4}He reactions, respectively. This experiment produced the highest ion temperature ever achieved with laser-irradiated deuterium clusters.


Physics of Plasmas | 2006

Equilibrium, multistability, and chiral asymmetry in rotated mirror plasmas

Prashant M. Valanju; S. M. Mahajan; H. J. Quevedo

The Hall term in two-fluid magnetohydrodynamics is shown to be necessary to balance the curl of the ion inertial force in a rotating plasma with spatially nonuniform crossed electric and magnetic fields. Two-fluid solutions are obtained that qualitatively explain the multistable rotational response observed in magneto-Bernoulli experiment, imply chiral symmetry breaking, i.e., handedness, and yield new dynamo-like electromotive terms in the effective circuit equation for externally rotated mirror plasma equilibria.


International Journal of Modern Physics E-nuclear Physics | 2016

Thermal and log-normal distributions of plasma in laser driven Coulomb explosions of deuterium clusters

M. Barbarino; M. Warrens; A. Bonasera; D. Lattuada; W. Bang; H. J. Quevedo; F. Consoli; R. De Angelis; P. Andreoli; Sachie Kimura; G. Dyer; Aaron Bernstein; K. Hagel; M. Barbui; K. Schmidt; E. Gaul; Michael Donovan; Joseph Natowitz; T. Ditmire

In this work, we explore the possibility that the motion of the deuterium ions emitted from Coulomb cluster explosions is highly disordered enough to resemble thermalization. We analyze the process of nuclear fusion reactions driven by laser–cluster interactions in experiments conducted at the Texas Petawatt laser facility using a mixture of D2+3He and CD4+3He cluster targets. When clusters explode by Coulomb repulsion, the emission of the energetic ions is “nearly” isotropic. In the framework of cluster Coulomb explosions, we analyze the energy distributions of the ions using a Maxwell–Boltzmann (MB) distribution, a shifted MB distribution (sMB), and the energy distribution derived from a log-normal (LN) size distribution of clusters. We show that the first two distributions reproduce well the experimentally measured ion energy distributions and the number of fusions from d–d and d-3He reactions. The LN distribution is a good representation of the ion kinetic energy distribution well up to high momenta where the noise becomes dominant, but overestimates both the neutron and the proton yields. If the parameters of the LN distributions are chosen to reproduce the fusion yields correctly, the experimentally measured high energy ion spectrum is not well represented. We conclude that the ion kinetic energy distribution is highly disordered and practically not distinguishable from a thermalized one.


11th International Conference on Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions, NN 2012 | 2013

Study of the yield of D-D, D-3He fusion reactions produced by the interaction of intense ultrafast laser pulses with molecular clusters

M. Barbui; W. Bang; A. Bonasera; K. Hagel; K. Schmidt; Joseph Natowitz; Gianluca Giuliani; M. Barbarino; G. Dyer; H. J. Quevedo; E. Gaul; Ted Borger; Aaron Bernstein; Mikael Martinez; Michael Donovan; T. Ditmire; Sachie Kimura; M. Mazzocco; F. Consoli; Riccardo De Angelis; P. Andreoli

The interaction of intense ultrafast laser pulses with molecular clusters produces a Coulomb explosion of the clusters. In this process, the positive ions from the clusters might gain enough kinetic energy to drive nuclear reactions. An experiment to measure the yield of D-D and D-3He fusion reactions was performed at University of Texas Center for High Intensity Laser Science. Laser pulses of energy ranging from 100 to 180 J and duration 150fs were delivered by the Petawatt laser. The temperature of the energetic deuterium ions was measured using a Faraday cup, whereas the yields of the D-D reactions were measured by detecting the characteristic 2.45 MeV neutrons and 3.02 MeV protons. In order to allow the simultaneous measurement of 3He(D,p)4He and D-D reactions, different concentrations of D2 and 3He or CD4 and 3He were mixed in the gas jet target. The 2.45 MeV neutrons from the D(D,n)3He reaction were detecteded as well as the 14.7 MeV protons from the 3He(D,p)4He reaction. The preliminary results will be shown.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Simultaneous streak and frame interferometry for electron density measurements of laser produced plasmas

H. J. Quevedo; M. McCormick; M. Wisher; Roger D. Bengtson; T. Ditmire

A system of two collinear probe beams with different wavelengths and pulse durations was used to capture simultaneously snapshot interferograms and streaked interferograms of laser produced plasmas. The snapshots measured the two dimensional, path-integrated, electron density on a charge-coupled device while the radial temporal evolution of a one dimensional plasma slice was recorded by a streak camera. This dual-probe combination allowed us to select plasmas that were uniform and axisymmetric along the laser direction suitable for retrieving the continuous evolution of the radial electron density of homogeneous plasmas. Demonstration of this double probe system was done by measuring rapidly evolving plasmas on time scales less than 1 ns produced by the interaction of femtosecond, high intensity, laser pulses with argon gas clusters. Experiments aimed at studying homogeneous plasmas from high intensity laser-gas or laser-cluster interaction could benefit from the use of this probing scheme.

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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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G. Dyer

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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Roger D. Bengtson

University of Texas at Austin

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W. Bang

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Mikael Martinez

University of Texas at Austin

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