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Dive into the research topics where J. S. Wark is active.

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Featured researches published by J. S. Wark.


Nature | 2012

Creation and diagnosis of a solid-density plasma with an X-ray free-electron laser

S. M. Vinko; O. Ciricosta; B. I. Cho; K. Engelhorn; H.-K. Chung; Colin Brown; T. Burian; J. Chalupský; Roger Falcone; Catherine Graves; V. Hajkova; Andrew Higginbotham; L. Juha; J. Krzywinski; Hae Ja Lee; Marc Messerschmidt; C. D. Murphy; Y. Ping; Andreas Scherz; W. F. Schlotter; S. Toleikis; J. J. Turner; L. Vysin; T. Wang; B. Wu; U. Zastrau; Diling Zhu; R. W. Lee; P. A. Heimann; B. Nagler

Matter with a high energy density (>105 joules per cm3) is prevalent throughout the Universe, being present in all types of stars and towards the centre of the giant planets; it is also relevant for inertial confinement fusion. Its thermodynamic and transport properties are challenging to measure, requiring the creation of sufficiently long-lived samples at homogeneous temperatures and densities. With the advent of the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) X-ray laser, high-intensity radiation (>1017 watts per cm2, previously the domain of optical lasers) can be produced at X-ray wavelengths. The interaction of single atoms with such intense X-rays has recently been investigated. An understanding of the contrasting case of intense X-ray interaction with dense systems is important from a fundamental viewpoint and for applications. Here we report the experimental creation of a solid-density plasma at temperatures in excess of 106 kelvin on inertial-confinement timescales using an X-ray free-electron laser. We discuss the pertinent physics of the intense X-ray–matter interactions, and illustrate the importance of electron–ion collisions. Detailed simulations of the interaction process conducted with a radiative-collisional code show good qualitative agreement with the experimental results. We obtain insights into the evolution of the charge state distribution of the system, the electron density and temperature, and the timescales of collisional processes. Our results should inform future high-intensity X-ray experiments involving dense samples, such as X-ray diffractive imaging of biological systems, material science investigations, and the study of matter in extreme conditions.


Acta Materialia | 2003

Laser-induced shock compression of monocrystalline copper: characterization and analysis

Marc A. Meyers; F. Gregori; Bimal K. Kad; M. S. Schneider; D. H. Kalantar; B. A. Remington; Guruswami Ravichandran; T. Boehly; J. S. Wark

Controlled laser experiments were used to generate ultra-short shock pulses of approximately 5 ns duration in monocrystalline copper specimens with [001] orientation. Transmission electron microscopy revealed features consistent with previous observations of shock-compressed copper, albeit at pulse durations in the µs regime. At pressures of 12 and 20 GPa, the structure consists primarily of dislocation cells; at 40 GPa, twinning and stacking-fault bundles are the principal defect structures; and at a pressure of 55–60 GPa, the structure shows micro-twinning and the effects of thermal recovery (elongated sub-grains). The results suggest that the defect structure is generated at the shock front; the substructures observed are similar to the ones at much larger durations. The dislocation generation is discussed, providing a constitutive description of plastic deformation. It is proposed that thermally activated loop nucleation at the front is the mechanism for dislocation generation. A calculational method for dislocation densities is proposed, based on nucleation of loops at the shock front and their extension due to the residual shear stresses behind the front. Calculated dislocation densities compare favorably with experimentally observed results. It is proposed that simultaneous diffraction by Laue and Bragg of different lattice planes at the shock front can give the strain state and the associated stress level at the front. This enables the calculation of the plastic flow resistance at the imposed strain rate. An estimated strength of 435 MPa is obtained, for a strain rate of 1.3 × 10 7 s 1 . The threshold stress for deformation twinning in shock compression is calculated from the constitutive equations for slip, twinning, and the Swegle–Grady relationship. The calculated threshold pressure for the [001] orientation is 16.3 GPa.  2003 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.


Science | 2013

Ultrafast three-dimensional imaging of lattice dynamics in individual gold nanocrystals.

Jesse N. Clark; Loren Beitra; Gang Xiong; Andrew Higginbotham; David M. Fritz; Henrik T. Lemke; Diling Zhu; Matthieu Chollet; Garth J. Williams; Marc Messerschmidt; Brian Abbey; Ross Harder; Alexander M. Korsunsky; J. S. Wark; Ian K. Robinson

Distorted Nanoparticle Nanoparticles have found many applications in modern technology; however, the full characterization of individual particles is challenging. One of the most interesting mechanical properties is the particles response to lattice distortion. This property has been probed for ensembles of nanoparticles, but the required averaging may distort the results. Clark et al. (p. 56, published online 23 May; see the Perspective by Hartland and Lo) were able to image the generation and subsequent evolution of coherent acoustic phonons from an individual perturbed gold nanocrystal on the picosecond time scale. An x-ray free-electron laser is used to probe the elastic modes of a gold nanocrystal. [Also see Perspective by Hartland and Lo] Key insights into the behavior of materials can be gained by observing their structure as they undergo lattice distortion. Laser pulses on the femtosecond time scale can be used to induce disorder in a “pump-probe” experiment with the ensuing transients being probed stroboscopically with femtosecond pulses of visible light, x-rays, or electrons. Here we report three-dimensional imaging of the generation and subsequent evolution of coherent acoustic phonons on the picosecond time scale within a single gold nanocrystal by means of an x-ray free-electron laser, providing insights into the physics of this phenomenon. Our results allow comparison and confirmation of predictive models based on continuum elasticity theory and molecular dynamics simulations.


Physics of Plasmas | 1999

Observation of a highly directional γ-ray beam from ultrashort, ultraintense laser pulse interactions with solids

P.A. Norreys; M. I. K. Santala; E.L. Clark; Matthew Zepf; I. Watts; F. N. Beg; K. Krushelnick; M. Tatarakis; A. E. Dangor; X. Fang; Paul Graham; T. McCanny; R. P. Singhal; K.W.D. Ledingham; Alan Creswell; D.C.W. Sanderson; Joseph Magill; A. Machacek; J. S. Wark; R. Allott; B. Kennedy; D. Neely

Novel measurements of electromagnetic radiation above 10 MeV are presented for ultra intense laser pulse interactions with solids. A bright, highly directional source of γ rays was observed directly behind the target. The γ rays were produced by bremsstrahlung radiation from energetic electrons generated during the interaction. They were measured using the photoneutron reaction [63Cu(γ,n)62Cu] in copper. The resulting activity was measured by coincidence counting the positron annihilation γ rays which were produced from the decay of 62Cu. New measurements of the bremsstrahlung radiation at 1019 W cm−2 are also presented.


Physical Review Letters | 2001

Probing Impulsive Strain Propagation with X-Ray Pulses

David A. Reis; Matthew F. DeCamp; P. H. Bucksbaum; Robert Clarke; Eric M. Dufresne; Marcus P. Hertlein; R. Merlin; R. W. Falcone; Henry C. Kapteyn; Margaret M. Murnane; Jörgen Larsson; T Missalla; J. S. Wark

Pump-probe time-resolved x-ray diffraction of allowed and nearly forbidden reflections in InSb is used to follow the propagation of a coherent acoustic pulse generated by ultrafast laser excitation. The surface and bulk components of the strain could be simultaneously measured due to the large x-ray penetration depth. Comparison of the experimental data with dynamical diffraction simulations suggests that the conventional model for impulsively generated strain underestimates the partitioning of energy into coherent modes.


Science | 2013

Femtosecond Visualization of Lattice Dynamics in Shock-Compressed Matter

Despina Milathianaki; Sébastien Boutet; Garth J. Williams; Andrew Higginbotham; Daniel Ratner; Arianna Gleason; Marc Messerschmidt; M. Marvin Seibert; D. C. Swift; Ph. Hering; William E. White; J. S. Wark

Elastic to Plastic When a crystal is mechanically compressed, it first reacts elastically (reversibly), and then enters the plastic regime, in which the structure of the material is irreversibly changed. This process can be studied with molecular dynamics (MD) simulations on very fine temporal and spatial scales, but experimental analysis has lagged behind. Milathianaki et al. (p. 220) shocked polycrystalline copper with a laser beam, and then took successive snapshots of the crystal structure at 10-picosecond intervals. The results were compared directly with atomistic simulations and revealed that the yield stress—the point of transition from plastic to elastic response—agreed well with MD predictions. The response to shock in polycrystalline copper is seen to evolve from elastic to plastic using ultrafast x-ray diffraction. The ultrafast evolution of microstructure is key to understanding high-pressure and strain-rate phenomena. However, the visualization of lattice dynamics at scales commensurate with those of atomistic simulations has been challenging. Here, we report femtosecond x-ray diffraction measurements unveiling the response of copper to laser shock-compression at peak normal elastic stresses of ~73 gigapascals (GPa) and strain rates of 109 per second. We capture the evolution of the lattice from a one-dimensional (1D) elastic to a 3D plastically relaxed state within a few tens of picoseconds, after reaching shear stresses of 18 GPa. Our in situ high-precision measurement of material strength at spatial (<1 micrometer) and temporal (<50 picoseconds) scales provides a direct comparison with multimillion-atom molecular dynamics simulations.


Materials Science and Technology | 2006

Material dynamics under extreme conditions of pressure and strain rate

B. A. Remington; P. Allen; Eduardo M. Bringa; James Hawreliak; D. Ho; K. T. Lorenz; H. E. Lorenzana; J. M. McNaney; Marc A. Meyers; S. W. Pollaine; K. Rosolankova; B. Sadik; M. S. Schneider; D. Swift; J. S. Wark; B. Yaakobi

Abstract Solid state experiments at extreme pressures (10–100 GPa) and strain rates (106–108s−1) are being developed on high energy laser facilities, and offer the possibility for exploring new regimes of materials science. These extreme solid state conditions can be accessed with either shock loading or with a quasi-isentropic ramped pressure drive. Velocity interferometer measurements establish the high pressure conditions. Constitutive models for solid state strength under these conditions are tested by comparing 2D continuum simulations with experiments measuring perturbation growth from the Rayleigh–Taylor instability in solid state samples. Lattice compression, phase and temperature are deduced from extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) measurements, from which the shock induced α–ω phase transition in Ti and the α–ϵ phase transition in Fe, are inferred to occur on subnanosec time scales. Time resolved lattice response and phase can also be measured with dynamic X-ray diffraction measurements, where the elastic–plastic (1D–3D) lattice relaxation in shocked Cu is shown to occur promptly (<1 ns). Subsequent large scale molecular dynamics (MD) simulations elucidate the microscopic dislocation dynamics that underlies this 1D–3D lattice relaxation. Deformation mechanisms are identified by examining the residual microstructure in recovered samples. The slip-twinning threshold in single crystal Cu shocked along the [001] direction is shown to occur at shock strengths of ∼20 GPa, whereas the corresponding transition for Cu shocked along the [134] direction occurs at higher shock strengths. This slip twinning threshold also depends on the stacking fault energy (SFE), being lower for low SFE materials. Designs have been developed for achieving much higher pressures, P>1000 GPa, in the solid state on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) laser.


Laser and Particle Beams | 2002

Plasma-based studies with intense X-ray and particle beam sources

R.W. Lee; H. A. Baldis; R. Cauble; O. L. Landen; J. S. Wark; A. Ng; S.J. Rose; Ciaran Lewis; David Riley; J.C. Gauthier; P. Audebert

The construction of short pulse (<200 fs) tunable X-ray laser sources based on the X-ray free electron laser (XFEL) concept will be a watershed for plasma-based and warm dense matter research. These new fourth generation light sources will have extremely high fields and short wavelengths (∼0.1 nm) with peak spectral brightnesses 10 10 greater than third generation sources. Further, the high intensity upgrade of the GSI accelerator facilities will lead to specific energy depositions up to 200 kJ/g and temperatures between 1 and 10 eV at almost solid-state densities, enabling interesting experiments in the regime of nonideal plasmas, such as the evolution of intense ion beams in the interior of a Jovian planet. Below we discuss several applications: the creation of warm dense matter (WDM) research, probing of near solid density plasmas, and laser-plasma spectroscopy of ions in plasmas. The study of dense plasmas has been severely hampered by the fact that laser-based methods have been unavailable and these new fourth generation sources will remove these restrictions.


Optics Letters | 1997

Ultrafast x-ray diffraction using a streak-camera detector in averaging mode

Jörgen Larsson; Z. Chang; E. Judd; P. J. Schuck; R. W. Falcone; P. A. Heimann; Howard A. Padmore; Henry C. Kapteyn; P. H. Bucksbaum; Margaret M. Murnane; R.W. Lee; A. Machacek; J. S. Wark; Xiuqin Liu; B. Shan

We demonstrate an apparatus for measuring time-dependent x-ray diffraction. X-ray pulses from a synchrotron are diffracted by a pair of Si(111) crystals and detected with an x-ray streak camera that has single-shot resolution of better than 1 ps. The streak camera is driven by a photoconductive switch, which is triggered by 100-fs laser pulses at a repetition rate of 1 kHz. The laser and the streak camera are synchronized with the synchrotron pulses. In the averaging mode, trigger jitter results in 2-ps temporal resolution. We measured the duration of 5-keV pulses from the Advanced Light Source synchrotron to be 70ps.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 1994

The Oxford electron‐beam ion trap: A device for spectroscopy of highly charged ions

J.D. Silver; A.J. Varney; H. S. Margolis; P. E. G. Baird; I P Grant; P. D. Groves; W. A. Hallett; A. T. Handford; P. J. Hirst; A. R. Holmes; D. J. H. Howie; R. A. Hunt; K. A. Nobbs; M. Roberts; W. Studholme; J. S. Wark; M. T. Williams; Morton A. Levine; D. D. Dietrich; W. G. Graham; I. D. Williams; R. O’Neil; S.J. Rose

An electron‐beam ion trap (EBIT) has just been completed in the Clarendon Laboratory, Oxford. The design is similar to the devices installed at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. It is intended that the Oxford EBIT will be used for x‐ray and UV spectroscopy of hydrogenic and helium‐like ions, laser resonance spectroscopy of hydrogenic ions and measurements of dielectronic recombination cross sections, in order to test current understanding of simple highly charged ions.

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R.W. Lee

University of California

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B. A. Remington

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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D. H. Kalantar

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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B. Nagler

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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James Hawreliak

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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D. Neely

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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Ciaran Lewis

Queen's University Belfast

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E. Wolfrum

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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