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Dive into the research topics where J. Bierbach is active.

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Featured researches published by J. Bierbach.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Harmonic generation from relativistic plasma surfaces in ultrasteep plasma density gradients.

C. Roedel; D. an der Bruegge; J. Bierbach; M. Yeung; T. Hahn; B. Dromey; S. Herzer; S. Fuchs; A. Galestian Pour; E. Eckner; M. Behmke; M. Cerchez; O. Jackel; D. Hemmers; T. Toncian; M. C. Kaluza; Alexey Belyanin; G. Pretzler; O. Willi; A. Pukhov; M. Zepf; G. G. Paulus

Harmonic generation in the limit of ultrasteep density gradients is studied experimentally. Observations reveal that, while the efficient generation of high order harmonics from relativistic surfaces requires steep plasma density scale lengths (L(p)/λ < 1), the absolute efficiency of the harmonics declines for the steepest plasma density scale length L(p)→0, thus demonstrating that near-steplike density gradients can be achieved for interactions using high-contrast high-intensity laser pulses. Absolute photon yields are obtained using a calibrated detection system. The efficiency of harmonics reflected from the laser driven plasma surface via the relativistic oscillating mirror was estimated to be in the range of 10(-4)-10(-6) of the laser pulse energy for photon energies ranging from 20-40 eV, with the best results being obtained for an intermediate density scale length.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

Sensitivity calibration of an imaging extreme ultraviolet spectrometer-detector system for determining the efficiency of broadband extreme ultraviolet sources

Silvio Fuchs; Christian Rödel; Manuel Krebs; Steffen Hädrich; J. Bierbach; A. E. Paz; S. Kuschel; Martin Wünsche; Vinzenz Hilbert; U. Zastrau; E. Förster; Jens Limpert; G. G. Paulus

We report on the absolute sensitivity calibration of an extreme ultraviolet (XUV) spectrometer system that is frequently employed to study emission from short-pulse laser experiments. The XUV spectrometer, consisting of a toroidal mirror and a transmission grating, was characterized at a synchrotron source in respect of the ratio of the detected to the incident photon flux at photon energies ranging from 15.5 eV to 99 eV. The absolute calibration allows the determination of the XUV photon number emitted by laser-based XUV sources, e.g., high-harmonic generation from plasma surfaces or in gaseous media. We have demonstrated high-harmonic generation in gases and plasma surfaces providing 2.3 μW and μJ per harmonic using the respective generation mechanisms.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Near-monochromatic high-harmonic radiation from relativistic laser?plasma interactions with blazed grating surfaces

M. Yeung; B. Dromey; Christian Rödel; J. Bierbach; M Wünsche; Gerhard G. Paulus; T. Hahn; D. Hemmers; C. Stelzmann; G. Pretzler; M. Zepf

Intense, femtosecond laser interactions with blazed grating targets are studied through experiment and particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations. The high harmonic spectrum produced by the laser is angularly dispersed by the grating leading to near-monochromatic spectra emitted at different angles, each dominated by a single harmonic and its integer-multiples. The spectrum emitted in the direction of the third-harmonic diffraction order is measured to contain distinct peaks at the 9th and 12th harmonics which agree well with two-dimensional PIC simulations using the same grating geometry. This confirms that surface smoothing effects do not dominate the far-field distributions for surface features with sizes on the order of the grating grooves whilst also showing this to be a viable method of producing near-monochromatic, short-pulsed extreme-ultraviolet radiation.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Noncollinear Polarization Gating of Attosecond Pulse Trains in the Relativistic Regime

M. Yeung; J. Bierbach; E. Eckner; S. Rykovanov; S. Kuschel; Alexander Sävert; M. Förster; C. Rödel; G. G. Paulus; S. Cousens; M. Coughlan; B. Dromey; Matthew Zepf

High order harmonics generated at relativistic intensities have long been recognized as a route to the most powerful extreme ultraviolet pulses. Reliably generating isolated attosecond pulses requires gating to only a single dominant optical cycle, but techniques developed for lower power lasers have not been readily transferable. We present a novel method to temporally gate attosecond pulse trains by combining noncollinear and polarization gating. This scheme uses a split beam configuration which allows pulse gating to be implemented at the high beam fluence typical of multi-TW to PW class laser systems. Scalings for the gate width demonstrate that isolated attosecond pulses are possible even for modest pulse durations achievable for existing and planned future ultrashort high-power laser systems. Experimental results demonstrating the spectral effects of temporal gating on harmonic spectra generated by a relativistic laser plasma interaction are shown.


Optics Express | 2015

Long-term operation of surface high-harmonic generation from relativistic oscillating mirrors using a spooling tape

J. Bierbach; M. Yeung; E. Eckner; Christian Roedel; S. Kuschel; M. Zepf; G. G. Paulus

Surface high-harmonic generation in the relativistic regime is demonstrated as a source of extreme ultra-violet (XUV) pulses with extended operation time. Relativistic high-harmonic generation is driven by a frequency-doubled high-power Ti:Sapphire laser focused to a peak intensity of 3·10(19) W/cm2 onto spooling tapes. We demonstrate continuous operation over up to one hour runtime at a repetition rate of 1 Hz. Harmonic spectra ranging from 20 eV to 70 eV (62 nm to 18 nm) were consecutively recorded by an XUV spectrometer. An average XUV pulse energy in the µJ range is measured. With the presented setup, relativistic surface high-harmonic generation becomes a powerful source of coherent XUV pulses that might enable applications in, e.g. attosecond laser physics and the seeding of free-electron lasers, when the laser issues causing 80-% pulse energy fluctuations are overcome.


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

Real-time, single-shot, carrier-envelope-phase measurement of a multi-terawatt laser

D. Adolph; Max Möller; J. Bierbach; M. B. Schwab; Alexander Sävert; M. Yeung; A. M. Sayler; Matthew Zepf; Malte C. Kaluza; Gerhard G. Paulus

We present the single-shot carrier-envelope phase (CEP) determination of a 1 Hz, multi-terawatt (TW) laser system with a setup based on spectral broadening in a hollow-core fiber and a stereographic measurement of the energy-dependent above-threshold ionization plateau. The latter is extremely sensitive to variations in CEP. As compared to the f-2f interferometers, this technique reduces the uncertainties due to the shot-to-shot intensity fluctuations, which are prevalent in the TW laser systems. The experimental results pave the way towards the investigation and control over CEP-sensitive processes at ultra-high intensities.


Archive | 2016

Polarization Gating in Relativistic Laser-Solid Interactions

M. Yeung; B. Dromey; S. Cousens; M. Coughlan; S. Rykovanov; Christian Rödel; J. Bierbach; S. Kuschel; E. Eckner; M. Förster; Gerhard G. Paulus; M. Zepf

High order harmonic generation from relativistic laser-solid interactions (focused intensity of \(>10^{18}~\)Wcm\(^{-2}\)) has the potential to serve as a source of bright attosecond radiation. One key mechanism that can generate such radiation is the Relativistically Oscillating Mirror (ROM) where the overdense plasma surface oscillates at relativistic velocities leading to a Doppler upshift of the reflected laser radiation. A major obstacle to the application of such a harmonic source is that the radiation is emitted as a periodic pulse train with the frequency of the driving laser. One route to limiting this emission to a single pulse is to exploit the ellipticity dependence of these mechanisms by forming a pulse whose polarisation varies from circular to linear to circular—a technique known as polarization gating. At small angles of incidence it is expected that the efficiency of the ROM mechanism drops dramatically for circular polarization. Here we present a novel method of implementing this technique for high power laser pulses along with proof of principle experimental results.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2012

Intense attosecond pulse trains from relativistic surface plasmas

Christian Rödel; J. Bierbach; D. an der Brügge; M. Yeung; T. Hahn; B. Dromey; S. Herzer; Silvio Fuchs; E. Eckner; M. Cerchez; Oliver Jäckel; T. Toncian; D. Hemmers; Malte C. Kaluza; G. Pretzler; O. Willi; M. Zepf; Gerhard G. Paulus

We report on the unequal spacing attosecond pulse trains from relativistic surface plasmas. The surface high harmonics efficiency is determined and could be enhanced using an optimized plasma scale length and density.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Radiation pressure-assisted acceleration of ions using multi-component foils in high-intensity laser–matter interactions

Bastian Aurand; S. Kuschel; Oliver Jaeckel; Christian Roedel; Hongwei Zhao; S. Herzer; A. E. Paz; J. Bierbach; Jens Polz; Bentsian Elkin; G. G. Paulus; Karmakar A; Paul Gibbon; Thomas Kuehl; Malte C. Kaluza


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2012

Optical Coherence Tomography using broad-bandwidth XUV and soft x-ray radiation

Silvio Fuchs; Alexander Blinne; Christian Rödel; U. Zastrau; Vinzenz Hilbert; Martin Wünsche; J. Bierbach; E. Förster; G. G. Paulus

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M. Yeung

Queen's University Belfast

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B. Dromey

Queen's University Belfast

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M. Zepf

Queen's University Belfast

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G. Pretzler

University of Düsseldorf

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T. Hahn

University of Düsseldorf

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