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Dive into the research topics where Oliver Jäckel is active.

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Featured researches published by Oliver Jäckel.


Nature | 2006

Laser-plasma acceleration of quasi-monoenergetic protons from microstructured targets

Heinrich Schwoerer; Sebastian Pfotenhauer; Oliver Jäckel; K.-U. Amthor; B. Liesfeld; W. Ziegler; R. Sauerbrey; K. W. D. Ledingham; T. Esirkepov

Particle acceleration based on high intensity laser systems (a process known as laser–plasma acceleration) has achieved high quality particle beams that compare favourably with conventional acceleration techniques in terms of emittance, brightness and pulse duration. A long-term difficulty associated with laser–plasma acceleration—the very broad, exponential energy spectrum of the emitted particles—has been overcome recently for electron beams. Here we report analogous results for ions, specifically the production of quasi-monoenergetic proton beams using laser–plasma accelerators. Reliable and reproducible laser-accelerated ion beams were achieved by intense laser irradiation of solid microstructured targets. This proof-of-principle experiment serves to illuminate the role of laser-generated plasmas as feasible particle sources. Scalability studies show that, owing to their compact size and reasonable cost, such table-top laser systems with high repetition rates could contribute to the development of new generations of particle injectors that may be suitable for medical proton therapy.


Optics Letters | 2013

High-intensity, high-contrast laser pulses generated from the fully diode-pumped Yb:glass laser system POLARIS

Marco Hornung; Sebastian Keppler; Ragnar Bödefeld; Alexander Kessler; Hartmut Liebetrau; Jörg Körner; Marco Hellwing; Frank Schorcht; Oliver Jäckel; Alexander Sävert; Jens Polz; Ajay Kawshik Arunachalam; Joachim Hein; Malte C. Kaluza

We report on the first generation of high-contrast, 164 fs duration pulses from the laser system POLARIS reaching focused peak intensities in excess of 2×10(20) W/cm2. To our knowledge, this is the highest peak intensity reported so far that has been achieved with a diode-pumped, solid-state laser. Several passive contrast enhancement techniques have been specially developed and implemented, achieving a relative prepulse intensity smaller than 10(-8) at t=-30 ps before the main pulse. Furthermore a closed-loop adaptive-optics system has been installed. Together with angular chirp compensation, this method has led to a significant reduction of the focal spot size and an increase of the peak intensity.


New Journal of Physics | 2008

Spectral shaping of laser generated proton beams

Sebastian M. Pfotenhauer; Oliver Jäckel; A. Sachtleben; Jens Polz; Ziegler W; Hans-Peter Schlenvoigt; K.-U. Amthor; Malte C. Kaluza; K.W.D. Ledingham; R. Sauerbrey; Paul Gibbon; A. P. L. Robinson; Heinrich Schwoerer

The rapid progress in the field of laser particle acceleration has stimulated a debate about the promising perspectives of laser based ion beam sources. For a long time, the beams produced exhibited quasi-thermal spectra. Recent proof-of-principle experiments demonstrated that ion beams with narrow energy distribution can be generated from special target geometries. However, the achieved spectra were strongly limited in terms of monochromacity and reproducibility. We show that microstructured targets can be used to reliably produce protons with monoenergetic spectra above 2 MeV with less than 10% energy spread. Detailed investigations of the effects of laser ablation on the target resulted in a significant improvement of the reproducibility. Based on statistical analysis, we derive a scaling law between proton peak position and laser energy, underlining the suitability of this method for future applications. Both the quality of the spectra and the scaling law are well reproduced by numerical simulations.


Nature Communications | 2013

Optical control of hard X-ray polarization by electron injection in a laser wakefield accelerator

Michael Schnell; Alexander Sävert; I. Uschmann; Maria Reuter; Maria Nicolai; Tino Kämpfer; Björn Landgraf; Oliver Jäckel; Oliver Jansen; A. Pukhov; Malte C. Kaluza; Christian Spielmann

Laser-plasma particle accelerators could provide more compact sources of high-energy radiation than conventional accelerators. Moreover, because they deliver radiation in femtosecond pulses, they could improve the time resolution of X-ray absorption techniques. Here we show that we can measure and control the polarization of ultra-short, broad-band keV photon pulses emitted from a laser-plasma-based betatron source. The electron trajectories and hence the polarization of the emitted X-rays are experimentally controlled by the pulse-front tilt of the driving laser pulses. Particle-in-cell simulations show that an asymmetric plasma wave can be driven by a tilted pulse front and a non-symmetric intensity distribution of the focal spot. Both lead to a notable off-axis electron injection followed by collective electron–betatron oscillations. We expect that our method for an all-optical steering is not only useful for plasma-based X-ray sources but also has significance for future laser-based particle accelerators.


New Journal of Physics | 2010

All-optical measurement of the hot electron sheath driving laser ion acceleration from thin foils

Oliver Jäckel; Jens Polz; Sebastian Pfotenhauer; Hans-Peter Schlenvoigt; Heinrich Schwoerer; Malte C. Kaluza

We present experimental results from an all-optical diagnostic method to directly measure the evolution of the hot-electron distribution driving the acceleration of ions from thin foils using high-intensity lasers. Central parameters of laser ion acceleration such as the hot-electron density, the temperature distribution and the conversion efficiency from laser pulse energy into hot electrons become comprehensively accessible with this technique.


New Journal of Physics | 2012

Observation of energetic terahertz pulses from relativistic solid density plasmas

A Gopal; T May; S. Herzer; Reinhard A; S Minardi; M. Schubert; U Dillner; B Pradarutti; Jens Polz; T Gaumnitz; Malte C. Kaluza; Oliver Jäckel; S Riehemann; Ziegler W; H-P Gemuend; H-G Meyer; G. G. Paulus

We report the first experimental observation of terahertz (THz) radiation from the rear surface of a solid target while interacting with an intense laser pulse. Experimental and two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations show that the observed THz radiation is mostly emitted at large angles to the target normal. Numerical results point out that a large part of the emission originates from a micron-scale plasma sheath at the rear surface of the target, which is also responsible for the ion acceleration. This opens a perspective for the application of THz radiation detection for on-site diagnostics of particle acceleration in laser-produced plasmas.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Direct observation of the injection dynamics of a laser wakefield accelerator using few-femtosecond shadowgraphy

Alexander Sävert; S. P. D. Mangles; Michael Schnell; Evangelos Siminos; J. M. Cole; M Leier; Maria Reuter; Matthew Schwab; Max Möller; K. Poder; Oliver Jäckel; G. G. Paulus; Christian Spielmann; Stefan Skupin; Z. Najmudin; Malte C. Kaluza

We present few-femtosecond shadowgraphic snapshots taken during the nonlinear evolution of the plasma wave in a laser wakefield accelerator with transverse synchronized few-cycle probe pulses. These snapshots can be directly associated with the electron density distribution within the plasma wave and give quantitative information about its size and shape. Our results show that self-injection of electrons into the first plasma-wave period is induced by a lengthening of the first plasma period. Three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations support our observations.


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Few-cycle optical probe-pulse for investigation of relativistic laser-plasma interactions

M. B. Schwab; Alexander Sävert; Oliver Jäckel; Jens Polz; Michael Schnell; T. Rinck; Laszlo Veisz; Max Möller; Peter Hansinger; G. G. Paulus; Malte C. Kaluza

The development of a few-cycle optical probe-pulse for the investigation of laser-plasma interactions driven by a Ti:sapphire, 30 Terawatt (TW) laser system is described. The probe is seeded by a fraction of the driving lasers energy and is spectrally broadened via self-phase modulation in a hollow core fiber filled with a rare gas, then temporally compressed to a few optical cycles via chirped mirrors. Shadowgrams of the laser-driven plasma wave created in relativistic electron acceleration experiments are presented with few-fs temporal resolution, which is shown to be independent of post-interaction spectral filtering of the probe-beam.


New Journal of Physics | 2012

Thomson backscattering from laser generated, relativistically moving high-density electron layers

Athena E. Paz; S. Kuschel; Christian Rödel; Michael Schnell; Oliver Jäckel; M. C. Kaluza; G. G. Paulus

We show experimentally that extreme ultraviolet radiation is produced when a laser pulse is Thomson backscattered from sheets of relativistic electrons that are formed at the rear surface of a foil irradiated on its front side with a high-intensity laser. An all-optical setup is realized using the Jena titanium:sapphire ten-terawatt laser system with an enhanced amplified spontaneous emission background of 10−12. The main pulse is split into two: one of them accelerates electrons from thin aluminium foil targets to energies of the order of some MeV and the other, counterpropagating probe pulse Thomson-backscatters off these electrons when they exit the target rear side. The process produced photons within a wide spectral range of some tens of eV as a result of the broad electron energy distribution. The highest scattering intensity is observed when the probe pulse arrives at the target rear surface 100 fs after irradiation of the target front side by the pump pulse, corresponding to the maximum flux of hot electrons at the interaction region. These results can provide time-resolved information about the evolution of the rear-surface electron sheath and hence about the dynamics of the electric fields responsible for the acceleration of ions from the rear surface of thin, laser-irradiated foils.


Optics Express | 2011

Creating circularly polarized light with a phase-shifting mirror.

Bastian Aurand; S. Kuschel; Christian Rödel; Martin Heyer; Frank Wunderlich; Oliver Jäckel; Malte C. Kaluza; Gerhard G. Paulus; T. Kuhl

We report on the performance of a system employing a multi-layer coated mirror creating circularly polarized light in a fully reflective setup. With one specially designed mirror we are able to create laser pulses with an ellipticity of more than ε = 98% over the entire spectral bandwidth from initially linearly polarized Titanium:Sapphire femtosecond laser pulses. We tested the homogeneity of the polarization with beam sizes of the order of approximately 10 cm. The damage threshold was determined to be nearly 400 times higher than for a transmissive quartz-wave plate which suggests applications in high intensity laser experiments. Another advantage of the reflective scheme is the absence of nonlinear effects changing the spectrum or the pulse-form and the scalability of coating fabrication to large aperture mirrors.

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Sebastian Pfotenhauer

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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G. G. Paulus

Helmholtz Institute Jena

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