Kim Ta Phuoc
École Polytechnique
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Featured researches published by Kim Ta Phuoc.
Physics of Plasmas | 2005
Kim Ta Phuoc; F. Burgy; Jean-Philippe Rousseau; Victor Malka; Antoine Rousse; Rahul Shah; Donald P. Umstadter; A. Pukhov; S. Kiselev
Beams of x rays in the kiloelectronvolt energy range have been produced from laser-matter interaction. Here, energetic electrons are accelerated by a laser wakefield, and experience betatron oscillations in an ion channel formed in the wake of the intense femtosecond laser pulse. Experiments using a 50 TW laser (30 fs duration) are described, as well as comparisons with numerical simulations. These results pave the way of a new generation of radiation in the x-ray spectral range, with a high collimation and an ultrafast pulse duration, produced by the use of compact laser system.
Nature Communications | 2013
S. Corde; C. Thaury; Agustin Lifschitz; G. Lambert; Kim Ta Phuoc; Xavier Davoine; R. Lehe; Denis Douillet; Antoine Rousse; Victor Malka
Laser-plasma accelerators can produce high-quality electron beams, up to giga electronvolts in energy, from a centimetre scale device. The properties of the electron beams and the accelerator stability are largely determined by the injection stage of electrons into the accelerator. The simplest mechanism of injection is self-injection, in which the wakefield is strong enough to trap cold plasma electrons into the laser wake. The main drawback of this method is its lack of shot-to-shot stability. Here we present experimental and numerical results that demonstrate the existence of two different self-injection mechanisms. Transverse self-injection is shown to lead to low stability and poor-quality electron beams, because of a strong dependence on the intensity profile of the laser pulse. In contrast, longitudinal injection, which is unambiguously observed for the first time, is shown to lead to much more stable acceleration and higher-quality electron beams.
Physical Review Letters | 2011
S. Corde; C. Thaury; Kim Ta Phuoc; Agustin Lifschitz; G. Lambert; Jérôme Faure; O. Lundh; E. Benveniste; A. Ben-Ismail; L. Arantchuk; A. Marciniak; A. Stordeur; P. Brijesh; Antoine Rousse; A. Specka; Victor Malka
The x-ray emission in laser-plasma accelerators can be a powerful tool to understand the physics of relativistic laser-plasma interaction. It is shown here that the mapping of betatron x-ray radiation can be obtained from the x-ray beam profile when an aperture mask is positioned just beyond the end of the emission region. The influence of the plasma density on the position and the longitudinal profile of the x-ray emission is investigated and compared to particle-in-cell simulations. The measurement of the x-ray emission position and length provides insight on the dynamics of the interaction, including the electron self-injection region, possible multiple injection, and the role of the electron beam driven wakefield.
Physics of Plasmas | 2008
Kim Ta Phuoc; S. Corde; R. Fitour; Rahul Shah; F. Albert; Jean-Philippe Rousseau; F. Burgy; Antoine Rousse; Vasily Seredov; A. Pukhov
In relativistic laser plasma interaction, electrons can be simultaneously accelerated and wiggled in an ion cavity created in the wake of an intense short pulse laser propagating in an underdense plasma. As a consequence of their motion, the accelerated electrons emit an intense x-ray beam called laser produced betatron radiation. Being an emission from charged particles, the features of the betatron source are directly linked to the electrons trajectories. In particular, the radiation is emitted in the direction of the electrons velocity. In this article we show how an image of electrons orbits in the wakefield cavity can be deduced from the structure of x-ray spatial profiles.
Physics of Plasmas | 2012
P. Brijesh; C. Thaury; Kim Ta Phuoc; S. Corde; G. Lambert; Victor Malka; S. P. D. Mangles; M. S. Bloom; S. Kneip
A density perturbation in an underdense plasma was used to improve the quality of electron bunches produced in the laser-plasma wakefield acceleration scheme. Quasi-monoenergetic electrons were generated by controlled injection in the longitudinal density gradients of the density perturbation. By tuning the position of the density perturbation along the laser propagation axis, a fine control of the electron energy from a mean value of 60 MeV to 120 MeV has been demonstrated with a relative energy-spread of 15 ± 3.6%, divergence of 4 ± 0.8 mrad, and charge of 6 ± 1.8 pC.
Light-Science & Applications | 2017
A. Döpp; B. Mahieu; Agustin Lifschitz; C. Thaury; Antoine Doche; E. Guillaume; Gabriele Grittani; Olle Lundh; Martin Hansson; J. Gautier; M. Kozlova; Jean Philippe Goddet; Pascal Rousseau; Amar Tafzi; Victor Malka; Antoine Rousse; S. Corde; Kim Ta Phuoc
Technology based on high-peak-power lasers has the potential to provide compact and intense radiation sources for a wide range of innovative applications. In particular, electrons that are accelerated in the wakefield of an intense laser pulse oscillate around the propagation axis and emit X-rays. This betatron source, which essentially reproduces the principle of a synchrotron at the millimeter scale, provides bright radiation with femtosecond duration and high spatial coherence. However, despite its unique features, the usability of the betatron source has been constrained by its poor control and stability. In this article, we demonstrate the reliable production of X-ray beams with tunable polarization. Using ionization-induced injection in a gas mixture, the orbits of the relativistic electrons emitting the radiation are reproducible and controlled. We observe that both the signal and beam profile fluctuations are significantly reduced and that the beam pointing varies by less than a tenth of the beam divergence. The polarization ratio reaches 80%, and the polarization axis can easily be rotated. We anticipate a broad impact of the source, as its unprecedented performance opens the way for new applications.
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2007
Kim Ta Phuoc; S. Corde; Rahul Shah; F. Albert; R. Fitour; Jean-Philippe Rousseau; F. Burgy; Brigitte Mercier; Antoine Rousse
We demonstrate that betatron x-ray radiation provides a direct imaging of electrons trajectories accelerated in laser wakefields. Electron excursions down to 0.7 ¿m ± 0.2 ¿tm have been measured in our parameter regime.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2017
Hyung Taek Kim; Kazuhisa Nakajima; Calin Hojbota; Jong Ho Jeon; Yong-Joo Rhee; Kyung Hwan Lee; Seong Ku Lee; Jae Hee Sung; Hwang Woon Lee; Vishwa Bandhu Pathak; Ki Hong Pae; S. Sebban; F. Tissandier; J. Gautier; Kim Ta Phuoc; Victor Malka; Chang Hee Nam
Short-pulse x-ray/gamma-ray sources have become indispensable light sources for investigating material science, bio technology, and photo-nuclear physics. In past decades, rapid advancement of high intensity laser technology led extensive progresses in the field of radiation sources based on laser-plasma interactions - x-ray lasers, betatron radiation and Compton gamma-rays. Ever since the installation of a 100-TW laser in 2006, we have pursued the development of ultrashort x-ray/gamma-ray radiations, such as x-ray lasers, relativistic high-order harmonics, betatron radiation and all-optical Compton gamma-rays. With the construction of two PW Ti:Sapphire laser beamlines having peak powers of 1.0 PW and 1.5 PW in 2010 and 2012, respectively [1], we have investigated the generation of multi-GeV electron beams [2] and MeV betatron radiations. We plan to carry out the Compton backscattering to generate MeV gamma-rays from the interaction of a GeV electron beam and a PW laser beam. Here, we present the recent progress in the development of ultrashort x-ray/gamma-ray radiation sources based on laser plasma interactions and the plan for developing Compton gamma-ray sources driven by the PW lasers. In addition, we will present the applications of laser-plasma x-ray lasers to x-ray holography and coherent diffraction imaging. [references] 1. J. H. Sung, S. K. Lee, T. J. Yu, T. M. Jeong, and J. Lee, Opt. Lett. 35, 3021 (2010). 2. H. T. Kim, K. H. Pae, H. J. Cha, I J. Kim, T. J. Yu, J. H. Sung, S. K. Lee, T. M. Jeong, J. Lee, Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 165002 (2013).
Proceedings of SPIE | 2017
B. Mahieu; Andreas S. Doepp; Agustin Lifschitz; Antoine Doche; C. Thaury; S. Corde; J. Gautier; E. Guillaume; Victor Malka; Antoine Rousse; Noémie Jourdain; Ludovic Lecherbourg; F. Dorchies; Kim Ta Phuoc
Betatron radiation from laser-plasma accelerators reproduces the principle of a synchrotron on a millimeter scale, but featuring femtosecond duration. Here we present the outcome of our latest developments, which now allow us to produce stable and polarized X-ray bursts. Moreover, the X-ray polarization can simply be adjusted by tuning the polarization of the laser driving the process. The excellent stability of the source is expressed in terms of pointing, flux, transverse distribution and critical energy of the spectrum. These combined features make our betatron source particularly suitable for applications in ultrafast X-ray science. In this presentation we will describe the generation process, relying on the ionization injection scheme for laser-plasma acceleration. We will show experimental measurements, numerical results and first applications in time-resolved spectroscopy.
High-Brightness Sources and Light-Driven Interactions (2016), paper ET2A.5 | 2016
F. Tissandier; Adrien Depresseux; J. Gautier; Jean-Philippe Goddet; Amar Tafzi; Grégory Iaquaniello; P. Rousseau; T. Lefrou; Alessandro Flacco; Agustin Lifschitz; Cédric Thaury; Kim Ta Phuoc; G. Lambert; Boris Vodungbo; V. Malka; Antoine Rousse; Philippe Zeitoun; Hyung-Taek Kim; J. Nejdl; M. Kozlova; Eduardo Oliva; G. Maynard; Sylvie Jacquemot; Stephane Sebban
We demonstrated an original technique which allowed us to achieve ultrashort pulse duration EUV lasing by increasing the plasma density. As demonstrated using a lower density amplifier, the emission can be made fully circularly polarized.