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Dive into the research topics where M. Stupka is active.

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Featured researches published by M. Stupka.


Laser and Particle Beams | 2010

Experimental study of radiative shocks at PALS facility

C. Stehlé; Matthias González; M. Kozlová; Bedrich Rus; Tomas Mocek; O. Acef; Jean Philippe Colombier; Thierry Lanz; Norbert Champion; Krzysztof Jakubczak; J. Polan; Patrice Barroso; Daniel Bauduin; Edouard Audit; J. Dostal; M. Stupka

We report on the investigation of strong radiative shocks generated with the high energy, sub-nanosecond iodine laser at PALS. These shock waves are characterized by a developed radiative precursor and their dynamics is analyzed over long time scales (50 ns), approaching a quasi-stationary limit. We present the first preliminary results on the rear side XUV spectroscopy. These studies are relevant to the understanding of the spectroscopic signatures of accretion shocks in Classical T Tauri Stars.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2005

Double Lloyd’s mirror: versatile instrument for XUV surface interferometry and interferometric microscopy

M. Kozlová; Bedřich Rus; Tomas Mocek; J. Polan; M. Stupka; A. R. Präg; P. Homer; M. Hudecek; G. Jamelot; J.-C. Lagron; K. Cassou; D. Ros; S. Kazamias; A. Klisnick; Jungjae Park; Chang Hee Nam

We have developed a double Lloyds mirror wavefront-splitting interferometer, constituting a compact device for surface probing in the XUV and soft X-ray spectral domain. The device consists of two independently adjustable superpolished flat surfaces, operated under grazing incidence angle to reflect a diverging or parallel beam. When the mirrors are appropriately inclined to each other, the structure produces interference fringes at the required distance and with tuneable fringe period. The double Lloyds mirror may be used alone for surface topography with nanometric altitude resolution, or in conjunction with an imaging element for interferometric XUV surface microscopy. In the latter case, resolution in the plane of the probed surface is about micron, which is given by the quality of the imaging element and/or by the detector pixel size. Here, we present results obtained using the double Lloyds mirror in two separate X-ray laser and high harmonics generation (HHG) application projects. The first experiment was aimed at understanding microscopic nature of the effects involved in laserinduced optical damage of thin pellicles, exposed to sub-ns laser pulses (438 nm) producing fluence of up to 10 Jcm-2. The probing source in this case was a QSS neon-like zinc soft X-ray laser, proving a few mJ at 21.2 nm in ~100-ps pulses. The second experiment was carried out using a narrowly collimated HHG beam near 30 nm, employed to topographically probe the surface of a semiconductor chip.


Archive | 2007

Development of Plasma X-Ray Amplifiers Based on Solid Targets for the Injector-Amplifier Scheme

M. Kozlová; B. Rus; T. Mocek; J. Polan; P. Homer; M. Stupka; M. Fajardo; D. De Lazzari; P. Zeitoun

Results of experimental studies aimed at generation and diagnostics of advanced soft X-ray amplifiers, produced from solid targets, are presented. 2D profiles of electron density of short plasma columns, generated by ~300-ps laser pulses under various illuminating conditions, were investigated by near-field distribution of the plasma self-emission, and by X-ray laser backlighting at 21 nm, accessing in the given geometry electron densities of 1022 cm-3. The obtained data indicate that by employing line focus with concave intensity profile it is possible to generate laterally highly uniform plasma columns of width ~500 °m, potentially suitable as amplifiers with negligible lateral refraction. By X-ray laser backlighting we further probed the morphology and gain region of test Zn plasmas, pumped by a sequence of a loosely focused weak prepulse and tightly focused main pulse, separated by 5.5 ns. The data clearly show the beneficial role of the prepulse in lateral homogenization of the plasma, and reveal narrow ~50-°m gain region.


Journal of Modern Optics | 2007

Development and applications of multimillijoule soft X-ray lasers

B. Rus; T. Mocek; M. Kozlová; J. Polan; P. Homer; M. Stupka; G.J. Tallents; M. H. Edwards; P. Mistry; D. S. Whittaker; N. Booth; Z. Zhai; G.J. Pert; James Dunn; A. J. Nelson; M. E. Foord; R. Shepherd; W. Rozmus; H. A. Baldis; M. Fajardo; D. De Lazzari; Philippe Zeitoun; G. Jamelot; A. Klisnick; D. Ros; K. Cassou; S. Kazamias; H. Bercego; C. Danson; S. Hawkes

We review development of multimillijoule X-ray lasers and of applications of these new laboratory sources carried out recently at the PALS facility. A backbone of this development is the neon-like zinc laser providing saturated output at 21.2 nm, with up to 10 mJ of energy per pulse. This represents currently the most energetic soft X-ray laboratory source. Recent improvements in its operation include better control of the beam shape, and more complete understanding of the prepulse pumping. The laser at 21.2 nm has been employed for a number of application experiments reviewed in this paper. They include transmission measurements of intense soft X-ray radiation, studies of fundamental processes of soft X-ray ablation, ablation micropatterning, feasibility study of soft X-ray Thomson scattering from dense plasmas, visualization of nanometric transient perturbation of optical surfaces, measurements of ablation rates of foils heated by IR pulses, and studies of 2D plasma hydrodynamics in the regime of sequential illumination.


XV International Symposium on Gas Flow, Chemical Lasers, and High-Power Lasers | 2005

Material ablation induced by focused 21.2-nm radiation from Ne-like Zn x-ray laser

Michal Bittner; L. Juha; Bedrich Rus; M. Kozlová; J. Krása; Zdenek Otcenasek; J. Polan; Ansgar R. Praeg; M. Stupka; L. Ryć; R. Sobierajski

Radiation from the Ne-like Zn soft x-ray laser (λ=21.2 nm, τ< 100 ps) driven by PALS (Prague Asterix Laser System) was successfully focused with a spherical Si/Mo multilayer-coated mirror to ablate poly(methyl methacrylate), monocrystalline silicon, and amorphous carbon. To our knowledge, this was the first observation of material ablation with a laser working in the soft x-ray region, i.e. λ<30 nm.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2007

X-ray lasers as probes to measure plasma ablation rates

G.J. Tallents; M. H. Edwards; D. S. Whittaker; P. Mistry; G.J. Pert; Bedrich Rus; Tomas Mocek; M. Kozlová; J. Polan; A. Praeg; M. Stupka; P. Homer

The rate of laser ablation at irradiances of ~2x1014 Wcm-2 of solid iron and aluminum has been measured using the transmission of a neon-like zinc X-ray laser at 21.2 nm through thin iron and aluminum targets. It is shown that the opacity of ablated material falls rapidly with increasing temperatures and decreasing density from the solid value. As ablated plasma becomes transparent to the X-ray laser flux, the thickness of solid, unablated material and hence the rate of ablation can be measured from time resolved X-ray laser transmission. A self-regulating model of laser ablation and fluid code simulations with absorption to thermal plasma of 5-10% show agreement with our measured ablation rates.


10th International Conference on X-Ray Lasers | 2007

Plasma Opacity and Laser Ablation Measurements Using X-Ray Lasers

G.J. Tallents; M. H. Edwards; D. S. Whittaker; N. Booth; H. Huang; P. Mistry; G.J. Pert; B. Rus; T. Mocek; M. Koslová; J. Polan; A. Praeg; M. Stupka; P. Homer; C. McKenna; Alice Delserieys; Ciaran Lewis; M. Notley; D. Neely

The use of x-ray lasers as probes of the opacity of hot dense plasma and rates of laser ablation is considered. It is shown that x-ray lasers are sufficiently bright to overcome plasma emission and enable plasma opacity to be measured. A demonstration experiment is presented where the temporal evolution of the opacity of a thin iron plasma at high temperature (30 – 250 eV) formed from an initially 50 nm thick solid tamped with a plastic overlay after heating by a laser pulse has been measured using the transmission of a nickel-like silver x-ray laser at 13.9 nm. The experimental results are compared to transmission calculations based on the iron opacity evaluated in a post-processor from predictions of the plasma conditions using a fluid and atomic physics code (EHYBRID). In another experiment, it is shown that laser ablation of a solid iron layer that is not tamped can be determined by the change in transmission of a 21.2 nm x-ray laser.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2005

Advanced optical damage studies using x-ray laser interferometric microscopy

Bedrich Rus; G. Jamelot; Herve Bercegol; M. Kozlová; Tomas Mocek; P. Homer; J. Polan; M. Stupka; K. Cassou; S. Kazamias; A. Klisnick; David Ros; C. Danson; S. Hawkes

We present early results of an application of X-ray laser, aimed at understanding the effects involved in formation of laser-induced damage in optical materials exposed to sub-ns laser pulses. For the purpose of the experiment, a novel interferometric microscopy technique was designed and tested. The interferometric beamline employed a double Lloyds mirror interferometer, used in conjunction with an imaging mirror to provide magnification of ~8 along a plane inclined with respect to the propagation direction of the X-ray beam. The objects investigated were thin plane beamsplitters made of fused silica (SiO2), irradiated by damaging laser light at 438 nm and in situ probed by the developed technique of interferometric microscopy. The soft X-ray beam was emitted by neon-like zinc laser, delivering up to 10 mJ at 21.2 nm. In conjunction with an array of in-situ optical diagnostics, one of the questions addressed was whether the damage of the rear surface of the beamsplitter occurs approximately during of much after the laser pulse. Another issue examined by the X-ray interferometric microscopy technique was whether the surface perturbation seen shortly after the impact of the damaging pulse is associated or not with the pattern of permanent surface modifications.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2007

Development of soft x-ray lasers at PALS and their applications in dense plasma physics

Bedrich Rus; Tomas Mocek; M. Kozlová; J. Polan; P. Homer; K. Jakubczak; M. Stupka; G.J. Tallents; M. H. Edwards; N. Booth; Z. Zhai; James Dunn; A. J. Nelson; M. Fajardo; Philippe Zeitoun; M. E. Foord; R. Shepherd; W. Rozmus; H. A. Baldis; J. Sobota

We present a review of recent development and applications of soft x-ray lasers, undertaken at the PALS Centre. The applications benefit from up to 10-mJ pulses at the wavelength of 21.2 nm. We describe the pumping regimes used to produce this soft x-ray laser, and outline its emission characteristics. A significant fraction of applications carried out using this device includes probing of dense plasmas produced by IR laser pulses and high-energy-density-in-matter experiments. Results obtained in these experiments are reviewed, including x-ray laser probing of dense plasmas, measurements of transmission of focused soft x-ray radiation at intensities of up to 1012 Wcm-2, measurements of IR laser ablation rates of thin foils, and probing high density plasmas by x-ray laser Thomson scattering


XV International Symposium on Gas Flow, Chemical Lasers, and High-Power Lasers | 2005

Development of soft x-ray lasers at PALS

Bedrich Rus; M. Kozlová; J. Polan; Ansgar R. Praeg; M. Stupka; Tomas Mocek

Program of development of deeply saturated Ne-like zinc soft X-ray laser at the PALS (Prague Asterix Laser System) Centre, employing as a pump device a kilojoule high-power iodine laser, is reviewed. The active medium giving rise to laser action at 21.2 nm is generated using a sequence of multiple-100-ns IR pump pulses, consisting of a weak prepulse (<10J), followed after 10 or 50 ns by the main pump pulse (~500 J). The population inversion in the resulting long scale-length density plasma allows to generate an extremely bright and narrowly collimated X-ray laser beam, providing up to ~10 mJ pulses and ~100 MW of peak power, which is the most powerful soft X-ray laser yet implemented. This device was recently used as radiation source in pilot radiobiology study of DNA damage in the soft X-ray region, and in material ablation. A novel interferometric device, based on double Lloyds mirror, is being developed for surface nanometric probing with teh soft X-ray laser as a source. A test experiment was performed to assess focusing properties of the X-ray laser beam down to a narrow spot, with the ultimate goal of achieving 1013 Wcm-2 for novel applications relevant to e.g. laboratory astrophysics.

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J. Polan

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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M. Kozlová

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Bedrich Rus

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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P. Homer

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Tomas Mocek

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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L. Juha

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Michal Bittner

Charles University in Prague

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