P. Tomassini
University of Milan
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Publication
Featured researches published by P. Tomassini.
Applied Optics | 2001
P. Tomassini; A. Giulietti; L. A. Gizzi; Marco Galimberti; Danilo Giulietti; M. Borghesi; O. Willi
Laser plasma interferograms are currently analyzed by extraction of the phase-shift map with fast Fourier transform (FFT) techniques [Appl. Opt. 18, 3101 (1985)]. This methodology works well when interferograms are only marginally affected by noise and reduction of fringe visibility, but it can fail to produce accurate phase-shift maps when low-quality images are dealt with. We present a novel procedure for a phase-shift map computation that makes extensive use of the ridge extraction in the continuous wavelet transform (CWT) framework. The CWT tool is flexible because of the wide adaptability of the analyzing basis, and it can be accurate because of the intrinsic noise reduction in the ridge extraction. A comparative analysis of the accuracy performances of the new tool and the FFT-based one shows that the CWT-based tool produces phase maps considerably less noisy and that it can better resolve local inhomogeneties.
Physics of Plasmas | 2002
Danilo Giulietti; M. Galimberti; A. Giulietti; L. A. Gizzi; R. Numico; P. Tomassini; M. Borghesi; Victor Malka; S. Fritzler; M. Pittman; K.T. Phouc; A. Pukhov
Very collimated bunches of high energy electrons have been produced by focusing super-intense femtosecond laser pulses in submillimeter under-dense plasmas. The density of the plasma, preformed with the laser exploding-foil technique, was mapped using Nomarski interferometry. The electron beam was fully characterized: up to 10^9 electrons per shot were accelerated, most of which in a beam of aperture below 10^−3 sterad, with energies up to 40 MeV. These measurements, which are well modeled by three-dimensional numerical simulations, validate a reliable method to generate ultrashort and ultracollimated electron bunches.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2013
A. Bacci; D. Alesini; P. Antici; M. Bellaveglia; R. Boni; E. Chiadroni; A. Cianchi; C. Curatolo; G. Di Pirro; A. Esposito; M. Ferrario; A. Gallo; G. Gatti; A. Ghigo; M. Migliorati; A. Mostacci; L. Palumbo; V. Petrillo; R. Pompili; C. Ronsivalle; A. R. Rossi; L. Serafini; B. Spataro; P. Tomassini; C. Vaccarezza
The technological development in the field of high brightness linear accelerators and high energy/high quality lasers enables today designing high brilliance Compton-X and Gamma-photon beams suitable for a wide range of applications in the innovative field of nuclear photonics. The challenging requirements of this kind of source comprise: tunable energy (1–20 MeV), very narrow bandwidth (0.3%), and high spectral density (104 photons/s/eV). We present here a study focused on the design and the optimization of an electron Linac aimed to meet the source specifications of the European Extreme Light Infrastructure—Nuclear Physics project, currently funded and seeking for an innovative machine design in order to outperform state-of-the-art facilities. We show that the phase space density of the electron beam, at the collision point against the laser pulse, is the main quality factor characterizing the Linac.
IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science | 2008
P. Tomassini; A. Bacci; John R. Cary; M. Ferrario; A. Giulietti; Danilo Giulietti; L. A. Gizzi; L. Labate; L. Serafini; V. Petrillo; C. Vaccarezza
Thomson scattering of laser pulses onto ultrarelativistic e-bunches is becoming an advanced source of tunable, quasi-monochromatic, and ultrashort X/gamma radiation. Sources aimed at reaching a high flux of scattered photons need to be driven by high-brightness e-beams, whereas extremely short (femtosecond scale or less) sources need to make femtosecond-long e-beams that collide with the laser pulses. In this paper, we explore the performance of the PLASMONX TS source in several operating regimes, including preliminary results on a source based on e-bunches produced by laser wakefield acceleration and controlled injection via density down ramp.
Physics of Plasmas | 2006
A. Giulietti; P. Tomassini; Marco Galimberti; Danilo Giulietti; L. A. Gizzi; P. Koester; L. Labate; T. Ceccotti; Pascal D’Oliveira; T. Auguste; P. Monot; Philippe Martin
The propagation of an ultrashort laser pulse can be affected by the light reaching the medium before the pulse. This can cause a serious drawback to possible applications. The propagation in He of an intense 60-fs pulse delivered by a Ti:sapphire laser in the chirped pulse amplification (CPA) mode has been investigated in conditions of interest for laser-plasma acceleration of electrons. The effects of both nanosecond amplified spontaneous emission and picosecond pedestals have been clearly identified. There is evidence that such effects are basically of refractive nature and that they are not detrimental for the propagation of a CPA pulse focused to moderately relativistic intensity. The observations are fully consistent with numerical simulations and can contribute to the search of a stable regime for laser acceleration.
Laser and Particle Beams | 2005
Danilo Giulietti; M. Galimberti; A. Giulietti; La Gizzi; L. Labate; P. Tomassini
Laser matter interaction in the regime of super-intense and ultra-short laser pulses is discovering common interests and goals for plasma and elementary particles physics. Among them, the electron laser wakefield acceleration and the X/γ tunable sources, based on the Thomson scattering (TS) of optical photons on accelerated electrons, represent the most challenging applications. The activity of the Intense Laser Irradiation Laboratory in this field will be presented.
Laser and Particle Beams | 2004
P. Tomassini; M. Galimberti; A. Giulietti; Danilo Giulietti; La Gizzi; L. Labate; Francesco Pegoraro
Laser Wake Field Acceleration of relativistic electron bunches is a promising method to produce a large amount of energetic particles with table top equipment. One of the possible methods to inject particles in the appropriate acceleration phase of the wake behind the pulse takes advantage of the partial longitudinal breaking of the wake crests across a density downramp. In this paper results of 2.5D PIC simulations, showing the production of an electron bunch with reduced energy spread, are reported. Also, a possible method to produce the required plasma density transition by laser explosion of a suitable couple of thin foils is discussed.
Physics of Plasmas | 2003
P. Tomassini; M. Galimberti; A. Giulietti; Danilo Giulietti; La Gizzi; L. Labate
The spectrum of relativistic electron bunches with large energy dispersion, like the ones usually generated with laser-plasma acceleration processes, is difficult to obtain with conventional methods. A novel spectroscopic concept, based on the analysis of the photons generated by Thomson scattering of a probe laser pulse by the electron bunch, is presented. The feasibility of a single-pulse spectrometer, using an energy-calibrated charge coupled device as detector, is investigated. Numerical simulations performed in conditions typical of a real experiment show the effectiveness and accuracy of the new method.
Medical Physics | 2009
P. Oliva; Bruno Golosio; S. Stumbo; Alberto Bravin; P. Tomassini
Thomson scattering x-ray sources can provide spectral distributions that are ideally suited for mammography with sufficient fluence rates. In this article, the authors investigate the effects of different spectral distributions on the image quality in simulated images of a breast mammographic phantom containing details of different compositions and thicknesses. They simulated monochromatic, quasimonochromatic, and polychromatic x-ray sources in order to define the energy for maximum figure of merit (signal-difference-to-noise ratio squared/mean glandular dose), the effect of an energy spread, and the effect of the presence of higher-order harmonics. The advantages of these sources with respect to conventional polychromatic sources as a function of phantom and detail thickness were also investigated. The results show that the energy for the figure of merit peak is between 16 and 27.4 keV, depending on the phantom thickness and detail composition and thickness. An energy spread of about 1 keV standard deviation, easily achievable with compact x-ray sources, does not appreciably affect the image quality.
Laser and Particle Beams | 2004
L. Labate; M. Galimberti; A. Giulietti; Danilo Giulietti; L. A. Gizzi; P Koster; S. Laville; P. Tomassini
Ray-tracing simulations of an optical X-ray system based on a spherically bent crystal operating in Bragg configuration for monochromatic projection imaging of thin samples are presented, obtained using a code developed for that purpose. The code is particularly suited for characterizing experimental arrangements routinely used with laser-produced plasma X-ray sources. In particular, the spatial resolution of the imaging system was investigated and a careful study of the complex pattern of the X-ray backlighting beam was performed.