Hironao Sakaki
Japan Atomic Energy Agency
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Hironao Sakaki.
Physical Review Letters | 2009
Y. Fukuda; A. Ya. Faenov; M. Tampo; T. A. Pikuz; T. Nakamura; M. Kando; Y. Hayashi; Akifumi Yogo; Hironao Sakaki; Takashi Kameshima; A. S. Pirozhkov; K. Ogura; M. Mori; T. Zh. Esirkepov; James Koga; A. S. Boldarev; V. A. Gasilov; A. I. Magunov; T. Yamauchi; R. Kodama; Paul R. Bolton; Y. Kato; T. Tajima; Hiroyuki Daido; S. V. Bulanov
We demonstrate generation of 10-20 MeV/u ions with a compact 4 TW laser using a gas target mixed with submicron clusters, corresponding to tenfold increase in the ion energies compared to previous experiments with solid targets. It is inferred that the high energy ions are generated due to formation of a strong dipole vortex structure. The demonstrated method has a potential to construct compact and high repetition rate ion sources for hadron therapy and other applications.
Applied Physics Letters | 2009
Akifumi Yogo; Katsutoshi Sato; Masaharu Nishikino; M. Mori; Teruki Teshima; Hodaka Numasaki; M. Murakami; Y. Demizu; S. Akagi; S. Nagayama; K. Ogura; A. Sagisaka; S. Orimo; Mamiko Nishiuchi; A. S. Pirozhkov; M. Ikegami; M. Tampo; Hironao Sakaki; Masayuki Suzuki; I. Daito; Yuji Oishi; H. Sugiyama; Hiromitsu Kiriyama; Hajime Okada; Shuhei Kanazawa; S. Kondo; Takuya Shimomura; Yoshiki Nakai; Manabu Tanoue; Hajime Sasao
We report the demonstrated irradiation effect of laser-accelerated protons on human cancer cells. In vitro (living) A549 cells are irradiated with quasimonoenergetic proton bunches of 0.8–2.4 MeV with a single bunch duration of 15 ns. Irradiation with the proton dose of 20 Gy results in a distinct formation of γ-H2AX foci as an indicator of DNA double-strand breaks generated in the cancer cells. This is a pioneering result that points to future investigations of the radiobiological effects of laser-driven ion beams. Unique high-current and short-bunch features make laser-driven proton bunches an excitation source for time-resolved determination of radical yields.
Optics Letters | 2012
K. Ogura; Mamiko Nishiuchi; Alexander S. Pirozhkov; Tsuyoshi Tanimoto; A. Sagisaka; Timur Zh. Esirkepov; M. Kando; Toshiyuki Shizuma; T. Hayakawa; Hiromitsu Kiriyama; Takuya Shimomura; Shyuji Kondo; Shuhei Kanazawa; Yoshiki Nakai; Hajime Sasao; Fumitaka Sasao; Y. Fukuda; Hironao Sakaki; Masato Kanasaki; Akifumi Yogo; Sergei V. Bulanov; Paul R. Bolton; Kiminori Kondo
Using a high-contrast (10(10):1) and high-intensity (10(21) W/cm(2)) laser pulse with the duration of 40 fs from an optical parametric chirped-pulse amplification/Ti:sapphire laser, a 40 MeV proton bunch is obtained, which is a record for laser pulse with energy less than 10 J. The efficiency for generation of protons with kinetic energy above 15 MeV is 0.1%.
Applied Physics Letters | 2011
Akifumi Yogo; T. Maeda; Toshihiko Hori; Hironao Sakaki; K. Ogura; Mamiko Nishiuchi; A. Sagisaka; Hiromitsu Kiriyama; Hajime Okada; Shuhei Kanazawa; Takuya Shimomura; Yoshiki Nakai; Manabu Tanoue; Fumitaka Sasao; Paul R. Bolton; M. Murakami; Taisei Nomura; S. Kawanishi; K. Kondo
Human cancer cells are irradiated by laser-driven quasimonoenergetic protons. Laser pulse intensities at the 5×1019 W/cm2 level provide the source and acceleration field for protons that are subsequently transported by four energy-selective dipole magnets. The transport line delivers 2.25 MeV protons with an energy spread of 0.66 MeV and a bunch duration of 20 ns. The survival fraction of in vitro cells from a human salivary gland tumor is measured with a colony formation assay following proton irradiation at dose levels of up to 8 Gy, for which the single bunch dose rate is 1×107 Gy/s and the effective dose rate is 0.2 Gy/s for 1 Hz repetition of irradiation. Relative biological effectiveness at the 10% survival fraction is measured to be 1.20±0.11 using protons with a linear energy transfer of 17.1 keV/μm.
Applied Physics Letters | 2009
Mamiko Nishiuchi; I. Daito; M. Ikegami; Hiroyuki Daido; M. Mori; S. Orimo; K. Ogura; A. Sagisaka; Akifumi Yogo; A. S. Pirozhkov; H. Sugiyama; Hiromitsu Kiriyama; Hajime Okada; Shuhei Kanazawa; S. Kondo; Takuya Shimomura; Manabu Tanoue; Yoshiki Nakai; Hajime Sasao; Daisuke Wakai; Hironao Sakaki; Paul R. Bolton; Il Woo Choi; Jae Hee Sung; J. Lee; Yuji Oishi; Takashi Fujii; Koshichi Nemoto; Hikaru Souda; Akira Noda
A pair of conventional permanent magnet quadrupoles is used to focus a 2.4 MeV laser-driven proton beam at a 1 Hz repetition rate. The magnetic field strengths are 55 and 60 T/m for the first and second quadrupoles, respectively. The proton beam is focused to a spot with a size of less than ∼3×8 mm2 at a distance of 650 mm from the source. This result is in good agreement with the Monte Carlo particle trajectory simulation.
Physics of Plasmas | 2015
Mamiko Nishiuchi; Hironao Sakaki; T. Zh. Esirkepov; K. Nishio; Tatiana A. Pikuz; A. Ya. Faenov; I. Yu. Skobelev; R. Orlandi; H. Sako; A. S. Pirozhkov; Kenya Matsukawa; A. Sagisaka; K. Ogura; Masato Kanasaki; Hiromitsu Kiriyama; Y. Fukuda; Hiroyuki Koura; M. Kando; Tomoya Yamauchi; Yukinobu Watanabe; S. V. Bulanov; K. Kondo; K. Imai; S. Nagamiya
Almost fully stripped Fe ions accelerated up to 0.9 GeV are demonstrated with a 200 TW femtosecond high-intensity laser irradiating a micron-thick Al foil with Fe impurity on the surface. An energetic low-emittance high-density beam of heavy ions with a large charge-to-mass ratio can be obtained, which is useful for many applications, such as a compact radio isotope source in combination with conventional technology.
IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2015
Hiromitsu Kiriyama; Michiaki Mori; Alexander S. Pirozhkov; K. Ogura; A. Sagisaka; Akira Kon; Timur Zh. Esirkepov; Y. Hayashi; H. Kotaki; Masato Kanasaki; Hironao Sakaki; Yuji Fukuda; James Koga; Mamiko Nishiuchi; M. Kando; Sergei V. Bulanov; Kiminori Kondo; Paul R. Bolton; Ondrej Slezak; David Vojna; Magdalena Sawicka-Chyla; Venkatesan Jambunathan; Antonio Lucianetti; Tomas Mocek
A high-contrast high-intensity petawatt-class Ti:sapphire chirped-pulse amplification laser has been developed for research on high field science. A saturable absorber and a low-gain optical parametric chirped-pulse amplification preamplifier in the front-end have improved the temporal contrast in the system to ∼
Scientific Reports | 2015
A. Ya. Faenov; J. Colgan; Stephanie B. Hansen; A. Zhidkov; Tatiana A. Pikuz; Mamiko Nishiuchi; S. A. Pikuz; I. Yu. Skobelev; J. Abdallah; Hironao Sakaki; A. Sagisaka; A. S. Pirozhkov; K. Ogura; Y. Fukuda; Masato Kanasaki; N. Hasegawa; M. Nishikino; M. Kando; Yukinobu Watanabe; Tetsuya Kawachi; Shinichi Masuda; Tomonao Hosokai; R. Kodama; K. Kondo
2 \times 10^{12}
Applied Physics Letters | 2009
A. Ya. Faenov; Tatiana A. Pikuz; Y. Fukuda; M. Kando; H. Kotaki; T. Homma; K. Kawase; Takashi Kameshima; A. S. Pirozhkov; Akifumi Yogo; M. Tampo; M. Mori; Hironao Sakaki; Y. Hayashi; T. Nakamura; S. A. Pikuz; I. Yu. Skobelev; S. V. Gasilov; A. Giulietti; C. A. Cecchetti; A.S. Boldarev; V. A. Gasilov; A. I. Magunov; S. Kar; M. Borghesi; Paul R. Bolton; Hiroyuki Daido; T. Tajima; Y. Kato; S. V. Bulanov
on the subnanosecond time scale at the ∼70 TW power level. In addition to the high-contrast broadband high-energy output from the final amplifier has been achieved with a flat-top spatial profile with a filling factor of ∼70%. This is the result of pump beam spatial profile homogenization with diffractive optical elements. The system produces the uncompressed output pulse energy of 29 J, indicating the capability for reaching a peak power of ∼600 TW. We discuss in detail the design, performance, and characterization of the laser including output power, pulse duration, and spatiotemporal beam quality. We also describe the on-going upgrade of the laser system and some applications for the laser in relativistic dominated laser–matter interactions.
Applied Physics Letters | 2013
Satoshi Jinno; Y. Fukuda; Hironao Sakaki; Akifumi Yogo; Masato Kanasaki; K. Kondo; A. Ya. Faenov; I. Yu. Skobelev; T. A. Pikuz; A. S. Boldarev; V. A. Gasilov
We report, for the first time, that the energy of femtosecond optical laser pulses, E, with relativistic intensities I > 1021 W/cm2 is efficiently converted to X-ray radiation, which is emitted by “hot” electron component in collision-less processes and heats the solid density plasma periphery. As shown by direct high-resolution spectroscopic measurements X-ray radiation from plasma periphery exhibits unusual non-linear growth ~E4–5 of its power. The non-linear power growth occurs far earlier than the known regime when the radiation reaction dominates particle motion (RDR). Nevertheless, the radiation is shown to dominate the kinetics of the plasma periphery, changing in this regime (now labeled RDKR) the physical picture of the laser plasma interaction. Although in the experiments reported here we demonstrated by observation of KK hollow ions that X-ray intensities in the keV range exceeds ~1017 W/cm2, there is no theoretical limit of the radiation power. Therefore, such powerful X-ray sources can produce and probe exotic material states with high densities and multiple inner-shell electron excitations even for higher Z elements. Femtosecond laser-produced plasmas may thus provide unique ultra-bright X-ray sources, for future studies of matter in extreme conditions, material science studies, and radiography of biological systems.