K. Highbarger
Ohio State University
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Featured researches published by K. Highbarger.
New Journal of Physics | 2008
M. Nakatsutsumi; J. R. Davies; R. Kodama; J.S. Green; K. L. Lancaster; K. U. Akli; F. N. Beg; Sophia Chen; D. Clark; R. R. Freeman; C. D. Gregory; H. Habara; R. Heathcote; D. Hey; K. Highbarger; P. A. Jaanimagi; M.H. Key; K. Krushelnick; T. Ma; A. G. MacPhee; A. J. Mackinnon; H. Nakamura; R. Stephens; M. Storm; M. Tampo; W. Theobald; L. Van Woerkom; R. L. Weber; Mingsheng Wei; N. Woolsey
The heating of plane solid targets by the Vulcan petawatt laser at powers of 0.32–0.73 PW and intensities of up to 4×1020 W cm−2 has been diagnosed with a temporal resolution of 17 ps and a spatial resolution of 30 μm, by measuring optical emission from the opposite side of the target to the laser with a streak camera. Second harmonic emission was filtered out and the target viewed at an angle to eliminate optical transition radiation. Spatial resolution was obtained by imaging the emission onto a bundle of fibre optics, arranged into a one-dimensional array at the camera entrance. The results show that a region 160 μm in diameter can be heated to a temperature of ~107 K (kT/e~ keV) in solid targets from 10 to 20 μm thick and that this temperature is maintained for at least 20 ps, confirming the utility of PW lasers in the study of high energy density physics. Hybrid code modelling shows that magnetic field generation prevents increased target heating by electron refluxing above a certain target thickness and that the absorption of laser energy into electrons entering the solid target was between 15–30%, and tends to increase with laser energy.
Physics of Plasmas | 2009
T. Ma; M.H. Key; R.J. Mason; K. U. Akli; R. L. Daskalova; R. R. Freeman; J. S. Green; K. Highbarger; P. A. Jaanimagi; James A. King; K. L. Lancaster; S. P. Hatchett; A. J. Mackinnon; A. G. MacPhee; P. A. Norreys; P. K. Patel; R. Stephens; W. Theobald; L. Van Woerkom; M. S. Wei; S. C. Wilks; F. N. Beg
Nail-wire targets (20 μm diameter copper wires with 80 μm hemispherical head) were used to investigate energy transport by relativistic fast electrons generated in intense laser-plasma interactions. The targets were irradiated using the 300 J, 1 ps, and 2×1020 W⋅cm−2 Vulcan laser at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory. A spherically bent crystal imager, a highly ordered pyrolytic graphite spectrometer, and single photon counting charge-coupled device gave absolute Cu Kα measurements. Results show a concentration of energy deposition in the head and an approximately exponential fall-off along the wire with about 60 μm 1/e decay length due to resistive inhibition. The coupling efficiency to the wire was 3.3±1.7% with an average hot electron temperature of 620±125 keV. Extreme ultraviolet images (68 and 256 eV) indicate additional heating of a thin surface layer of the wire. Modeling using the hybrid E-PLAS code has been compared with the experimental data, showing evidence of resistive heating, magnetic trap...
Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2008
M. Nakatsutsumi; R. Kodama; Y. Aglitskiy; K. U. Akli; D. Batani; S. D. Baton; F. N. Beg; A. Benuzzi-Mounaix; Sophia Chen; D. Clark; J. R. Davies; R. R. Freeman; J. Fuchs; J. S. Green; C. D. Gregory; P. Guillou; H. Habara; R. Heathcote; D. Hey; K. Highbarger; P. A. Jaanimagi; M.H. Key; M. Koenig; K. Krushelnick; K. L. Lancaster; B. Loupias; T. Ma; A. G. MacPhee; A J Mackinonn; K. Mima
Propagation of electron beams generated in laser-plasma interactions is strongly influenced by self-induced electrostatic fields at target-vacuum interfaces, resulting the refluxing of electrons. We confirmed the refluxing and propagation of electrons with three different kinds of target configurations; thin-wide foil, thin-narrow foil, and long-wire geometry. Enhancement of target heating, effective guiding and collimation of high density MeV electrons were observed.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2009
W. Theobald; C. Stoeckl; P. A. Jaanimagi; P. M. Nilson; M. Storm; D. D. Meyerhofer; T. C. Sangster; D. Hey; A. J. Mackinnon; Hae-Sim Park; P. K. Patel; R. Shepherd; Richard Adolph Snavely; M.H. Key; J.A. King; B. Zhang; R. Stephens; K. U. Akli; K. Highbarger; R. L. Daskalova; L. Van Woerkom; R. R. Freeman; J. S. Green; G. Gregori; K. L. Lancaster; P. A. Norreys
A dual-channel, curved-crystal spectrograph was designed to measure time-integrated x-ray spectra in the approximately 1.5 to 2 keV range (6.2-8.2 A wavelength) from small-mass, thin-foil targets irradiated by the VULCAN petawatt laser focused up to 4x10(20) W/cm(2). The spectrograph consists of two cylindrically curved potassium-acid-phthalate crystals bent in the meridional plane to increase the spectral range by a factor of approximately 10 compared to a flat crystal. The device acquires single-shot x-ray spectra with good signal-to-background ratios in the hard x-ray background environment of petawatt laser-plasma interactions. The peak spectral energies of the aluminum He(alpha) and Ly(alpha) resonance lines were approximately 1.8 and approximately 1.0 mJ/eV sr (approximately 0.4 and 0.25 J/A sr), respectively, for 220 J, 10 ps laser irradiation.
Physics of Plasmas | 2017
K. L. Lancaster; A. P. L. Robinson; J. Pasley; Peter Hakel; T. Ma; K. Highbarger; F. N. Beg; S. N. Chen; R. L. Daskalova; R. R. Freeman; J. S. Green; H. Habara; P. A. Jaanimagi; M.H. Key; J. King; R. Kodama; K. Krushelnick; H. Nakamura; M. Nakatsutsumi; A. J. Mackinnon; A. G. MacPhee; R.B. Stephens; L. Van Woerkom; P. A. Norreys
Understanding hydrodynamic phenomena driven by fast electron heating is important for a range of applications including fast electron collimation schemes for fast ignition and the production and study of hot, dense matter. In this work, detailed numerical simulations modelling the heating, hydrodynamic evolution, and extreme ultra-violet (XUV) emission in combination with experimental XUV images indicate shock waves of exceptional strength (200 Mbar) launched due to rapid heating of materials via a petawatt laser. We discuss in detail the production of synthetic XUV images and how they assist us in interpreting experimental XUV images captured at 256 eV using a multi-layer spherical mirror.
Physical Review Letters | 2008
K. U. Akli; Stephanie B. Hansen; Andreas Kemp; R. R. Freeman; F. N. Beg; D. C. Clark; S. D. Chen; D. Hey; S. P. Hatchett; K. Highbarger; E. Giraldez; J. S. Green; G. Gregori; K. L. Lancaster; T. Ma; A. J. Mackinnon; P. A. Norreys; N. Patel; J. Pasley; C. Shearer; R. Stephens; C. Stoeckl; M. Storm; W. Theobald; L. Van Woerkom; R. L. Weber; M.H. Key
Nature Physics | 2007
J.S. Green; K. L. Lancaster; K. Akli; C. D. Gregory; F. N. Beg; Sophia Chen; D. Clark; R. R. Freeman; S. Hawkes; C. Hernandez-Gomez; H. Habara; R. Heathcote; D. Hey; K. Highbarger; M.H. Key; R. Kodama; K. Krushelnick; I. O. Musgrave; H. Nakamura; M. Nakatsutsumi; N. Patel; R. Stephens; M. Storm; M. Tampo; W. Theobald; L. Van Woerkom; R. L. Weber; Mingsheng Wei; N. Woolsey; P. A. Norreys
Journal De Physique Iv | 2006
R. R. Freeman; K. Akli; F. N. Beg; R. Betti; Sophia Chen; D. Clark; P. Gu; G. Gregori; S. P. Hatchett; D. Hey; K. Highbarger; J.M. Hill; N. Izumi; M.H. Key; J.A. King; J. A. Koch; B. Lasinki; B. Langdon; Andrew J. Mackinnon; D. D. Meyerhofer; N. Patel; P. K. Patel; J. Pasley; Hae-Sim Park; C. Ren; Richard Adolph Snavely; R. Stephens; C. Stoeckl; Max Tabak; R. P. J. Town
Physical Review E | 2009
K. L. Lancaster; M. Sherlock; J.S. Green; Christopher D. Gregory; P. Hakel; K. U. Akli; F. N. Beg; Sophia Chen; R. R. Freeman; H. Habara; R. Heathcote; D S Hey; K. Highbarger; M.H. Key; R. Kodama; K. Krushelnick; H. Nakamura; M. Nakatsutsumi; J. Pasley; R. Stephens; M. Storm; M. Tampo; W. Theobald; L. Van Woerkom; R. L. Weber; Mingsheng Wei; N. Woolsey; T. Yabuuchi; P. A. Norreys
Archive | 2008
T. Ma; James A. King; M. S. Wei; F. N. Beg; R.J. Mason; A. G. MacPhee; S. P. Hatchett; A. J. Mackinnon; P. K. Patel; R.B. Stephens; K. U. Akli; R. R. Freeman; K. Highbarger; R. L. Weber; L. D. Van Woerkom; J. S. Green; K. L. Lancaster; J. Pasley; P. A. Norreys; P. Jamangi; W. Theobald