Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Matthias Geissel is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Matthias Geissel.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2009

Radiochromic film imaging spectroscopy of laser-accelerated proton beams

F. Nuernberg; Marius Schollmeier; E. Brambrink; A. Blazevic; D. C. Carroll; K. A. Flippo; D. C. Gautier; Matthias Geissel; K. Harres; B. M. Hegelich; Olle Lundh; K. Markey; P. McKenna; D. Neely; Jörg Schreiber; Markus Roth

This article reports on an experimental method to fully reconstruct laser-accelerated proton beam parameters called radiochromic film imaging spectroscopy (RIS). RIS allows for the characterization of proton beams concerning real and virtual source size, envelope- and microdivergence, normalized transverse emittance, phase space, and proton spectrum. This technique requires particular targets and a high resolution proton detector. Therefore thin gold foils with a microgrooved rear side were manufactured and characterized. Calibrated GafChromic radiochromic film (RCF) types MD-55, HS, and HD-810 in stack configuration were used as spatial and energy resolved film detectors. The principle of the RCF imaging spectroscopy was demonstrated at four different laser systems. This can be a method to characterize a laser system with respect to its proton-acceleration capability. In addition, an algorithm to calculate the spatial and energy resolved proton distribution has been developed and tested to get a better idea of laser-accelerated proton beams and their energy deposition with respect to further applications.


Physics of Plasmas | 2003

Proton spectra from ultraintense laser-plasma interaction with thin foils: Experiments, theory, and simulation

M. Allen; Y. Sentoku; Patrick Audebert; A. Blazevic; Thomas E. Cowan; J. Fuchs; J. C. Gauthier; Matthias Geissel; Manuel Hegelich; Stefan Karsch; Edward C. Morse; P. K. Patel; Markus Roth

A beam of high energy ions and protons is observed from targets irradiated with intensities up to 5×1019 W/cm2. Maximum proton energy is shown to strongly correlate with laser-irradiance on target. Energy spectra from a magnetic spectrometer show a plateau region near the maximum energy cutoff and modulations in the spectrum at approximately 65% of the cutoff energy. Presented two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations suggest that modulations in the proton spectrum are caused by the presence of multiple heavy-ion species in the expanding plasma.


Laser and Particle Beams | 2005

Laser accelerated ions and electron transport in ultra-intense laser matter interaction

Markus Roth; E. Brambrink; P. Audebert; A. Blazevic; Rosemary Clarke; James A. Cobble; T. E. Cowan; Juan C. Fernandez; J. Fuchs; Matthias Geissel; Dietrich Habs; M. Hegelich; Stefan Karsch; K.W.D. Ledingham; D. Neely; H. Ruhl; T. Schlegel; J. Schreiber

Since their discovery, laser accelerated ion beams have been the subject of great interest. The ion beam peak power and beam emittance is unmatched by any conventionally accelerated ion beam. Due to the unique quality, a wealth of applications has been proposed, and the first experiments confirmed their prospects. Laser ion acceleration is strongly linked to the generation and transport of hot electrons by the interaction of ultra-intense laser light with matter. Comparing ion acceleration experiments at laser systems with different beam parameters and using targets of varying thickness, material and temperature, some insight on the underlying physics can be obtained. The paper will present experimental results obtained at different laser systems, first beam quality measurement on laser accelerated heavy ions, and ion beam source size measurements at different laser parameters. Using structured targets, we compare information obtained from micro patterned ion beams about the accelerating electron sheath, and the influence of magnetic fields on the electron transport inside conducting targets.


Physics of Plasmas | 2005

Spectral properties of laser-accelerated mid-Z MeV/u ion beams

B. M. Hegelich; B. J. Albright; P. Audebert; A. Blazevic; E. Brambrink; J. A. Cobble; T. Cowan; J. Fuchs; J. C. Gauthier; C. Gautier; Matthias Geissel; Dietrich Habs; R. P. Johnson; Stefan Karsch; Andreas Kemp; S. Letzring; Markus Roth; U. Schramm; Jörg Schreiber; Klaus Witte; Juan C. Fernandez

Collimated jets of beryllium, carbon, oxygen, fluorine, and palladium ions with >1MeV∕nucleon energies are observed from the rear surface of thin foils irradiated with laser intensities of up to 5×1019W∕cm2. The normally dominant proton acceleration is suppressed when the target is subjected to Joule heating to remove hydrogen-bearing contaminant. This inhibits screening effects and permits effective energy transfer to and acceleration of heavier ion species. The influence of remnant protons on the spectral shape of the next highest charge-to-mass ratio species is shown. Particle-in-cell simulations confirming the experimental findings are presented.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Demonstration of thermonuclear conditions in magnetized liner inertial fusion experimentsa)

M. R. Gomez; Stephen A. Slutz; Adam B Sefkow; Kelly Hahn; Stephanie B. Hansen; P. F. Knapp; Paul Schmit; C. L. Ruiz; Daniel Brian Sinars; Eric Harding; Christopher A. Jennings; Thomas James Awe; Matthias Geissel; Dean C. Rovang; I. C. Smith; Gordon Andrew Chandler; G. W. Cooper; Michael Edward Cuneo; A. J. Harvey-Thompson; Mark Herrmann; Mark Hess; Derek C. Lamppa; M. R. Martin; R. D. McBride; Kyle Peterson; John L. Porter; Gregory A. Rochau; M. E. Savage; D. G. Schroen; W. A. Stygar

The magnetized liner inertial fusion concept [S. A. Slutz et al., Phys. Plasmas 17, 056303 (2010)] utilizes a magnetic field and laser heating to relax the pressure requirements of inertial confinement fusion. The first experiments to test the concept [M. R. Gomez et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 113, 155003 (2014)] were conducted utilizing the 19 MA, 100 ns Z machine, the 2.5 kJ, 1 TW Z Beamlet laser, and the 10 T Applied B-field on Z system. Despite an estimated implosion velocity of only 70 km/s in these experiments, electron and ion temperatures at stagnation were as high as 3 keV, and thermonuclear deuterium-deuterium neutron yields up to 2 × 1012 have been produced. X-ray emission from the fuel at stagnation had widths ranging from 50 to 110 μm over a roughly 80% of the axial extent of the target (6–8 mm) and lasted approximately 2 ns. X-ray yields from these experiments are consistent with a stagnation density of the hot fuel equal to 0.2–0.4 g/cm3. In these experiments, up to 5 × 1010 secondary deuterium-...


Physics of Plasmas | 2011

Characterization and focusing of light ion beams generated by ultra-intensely irradiated thin foils at the kilojoule scale a)

Dustin Offermann; K. A. Flippo; J. A. Cobble; Mark J. Schmitt; S. A. Gaillard; T. Bartal; D. V. Rose; D. R. Welch; Matthias Geissel; M. Schollmeier

We present the first observations of focused multi-MeV carbon ion beams generated using ultra-intense shortpulse laser interactions with thin hemispherical (400μm radius) targets. The experiments were performed at the Trident laser facility (80 J, 0.6 ps, 2×1020W/cm2) at Los Alamos National Laboratory and at the Omega EP (extended performance) facility (1 kJ, 10 ps, 5×1018W/cm2) at the Laboratory for Laser Energetics. The targets were chemical vapor deposition diamond, hemi-shells and were heated to remove contaminants. The ion beam focusing was characterized by tracing the projection of a witness mesh in the ion beam on a lithium fluoride nuclear activation detector. From the data, we infer that the divergence of the beam changes as a function of time. We present a 2-D isothermal model to explain the dynamics. We also present discrepancies in the peak proton and carbon ion energies from the two facilities. The implication of which is a fundamental difference in the temporal evolution of the beams from th...


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2011

Compact, rugged in-chamber transmission spectrometers (7-28 keV) for the Sandia Z facility.

Daniel Brian Sinars; David Franklin Wenger; S. A. Pikuz; B. Jones; Matthias Geissel; Stephanie B. Hansen; C.A. Coverdale; David J. Ampleford; M. E. Cuneo; L. A. McPherson; G. A. Rochau

We describe a pair of time-integrated transmission spectrometers that are designed to survey 7-28 keV (1.9 to 0.43 Å) x-ray photons produced by experiments on the Sandia Z pulsed power facility. Each spectrometer uses a quartz 10-11 crystal in a Cauchois geometry with a slit to provide spatial resolution along one dimension. The spectrometers are located in the harsh environment of the Z vacuum chamber, which necessitates that their design be compact and rugged. Example data from calibration tests and Z experiments are shown that illustrate the utility of the instruments.


Optics Express | 2006

Development of a variable focal length concave mirror for on-shot thermal lens correction in rod amplifiers

Jens Schwarz; Matthias Geissel; Patrick K. Rambo; John L. Porter; Daniel Headley; Marc Ramsey

An optical surface of variable concave parabolic shape and a clear aperture of 30 mm was created using two rings to deform a flat 50.8 mm diameter mirror. The deformable mirror assembly was modeled using finite element analysis software as well as analytical solutions. Measured parabolic surface deformation showed good agreement with those models. Mirror performance was quantitatively studied using an interferometer and focal lengths from hundreds of meters down to the meter scale have been achieved. In this publication, the deformable mirror has been applied to compensate on shot thermal lensing in 16 mm diameter and 25 mm diameter Nd:Phosphate glass rod amplifiers by using only a single actuator. The possibility to rapidly change focal lengths across two to three orders of magnitude has applications for remote sensing, such as laser induced breakdown spectroscopy, LIDAR, and control of laser filament formation.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Laser-to-hot-electron conversion limitations in relativistic laser matter interactions due to multi-picosecond dynamics

M. Schollmeier; Adam B Sefkow; Matthias Geissel; Alexey Arefiev; K. A. Flippo; Sandrine A. Gaillard; Randy P. Johnson; Mark Kimmel; Dustin Offermann; Patrick K. Rambo; Jens Schwarz; T. Shimada

High-energy short-pulse lasers are pushing the limits of plasma-based particle acceleration, x-ray generation, and high-harmonic generation by creating strong electromagnetic fields at the laser focus where electrons are being accelerated to relativistic velocities. Understanding the relativistic electron dynamics is key for an accurate interpretation of measurements. We present a unified and self-consistent modeling approach in quantitative agreement with measurements and differing trends across multiple target types acquired from two separate laser systems, which differ only in their nanosecond to picosecond-scale rising edge. Insights from high-fidelity modeling of laser-plasma interaction demonstrate that the ps-scale, orders of magnitude weaker rising edge of the main pulse measurably alters target evolution and relativistic electron generation compared to idealized pulse shapes. This can lead for instance to the experimentally observed difference between 45 MeV and 75 MeV maximum energy protons for two nominally identical laser shots, due to ps-scale prepulse variations. Our results show that the realistic inclusion of temporal laser pulse profiles in modeling efforts is required if predictive capability and extrapolation are sought for future target and laser designs or for other relativistic laser ion acceleration schemes.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Diagnosing magnetized liner inertial fusion experiments on Za)

Stephanie B. Hansen; M. R. Gomez; Adam B Sefkow; Stephen A. Slutz; Daniel Brian Sinars; Kelly Hahn; Eric Harding; P. F. Knapp; Paul Schmit; Thomas James Awe; R. D. McBride; Christopher A. Jennings; Matthias Geissel; A. J. Harvey-Thompson; Kyle Peterson; Dean C. Rovang; Gordon Andrew Chandler; G. W. Cooper; Michael Edward Cuneo; Mark Herrmann; Mark Hess; Owen Johns; Derek C. Lamppa; M. R. Martin; John L. Porter; G. K. Robertson; G. A. Rochau; C. L. Ruiz; M. E. Savage; I. C. Smith

Magnetized Liner Inertial Fusion experiments performed at Sandias Z facility have demonstrated significant thermonuclear fusion neutron yields (∼1012 DD neutrons) from multi-keV deuterium plasmas inertially confined by slow (∼10 cm/μs), stable, cylindrical implosions. Effective magnetic confinement of charged fusion reactants and products is signaled by high secondary DT neutron yields above 1010. Analysis of extensive power, imaging, and spectroscopic x-ray measurements provides a detailed picture of ∼3 keV temperatures, 0.3 g/cm3 densities, gradients, and mix in the fuel and liner over the 1–2 ns stagnation duration.

Collaboration


Dive into the Matthias Geissel's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jens Schwarz

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patrick K. Rambo

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John L. Porter

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Adam B Sefkow

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Schollmeier

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Markus Roth

Technische Universität Darmstadt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark Kimmel

Georgia Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel Brian Sinars

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eric Harding

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Aaron Edens

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge