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Dive into the research topics where R. G. Evans is active.

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Featured researches published by R. G. Evans.


New Journal of Physics | 2008

Radiation pressure acceleration of thin foils with circularly polarized laser pulses

A. P. L. Robinson; M. Zepf; S. Kar; R. G. Evans; C. Bellei

A new regime is described for radiation pressure acceleration of a thin foil by an intense laser beam of above 1020 W cm−2. Highly monoenergetic proton beams extending to giga-electron-volt energies can be produced with very high efficiency using circularly polarized light. The proton beams have a very small divergence angle (<4°). This new method allows the construction of ultra-compact proton and ion accelerators with ultra-short particle bursts.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2015

Contemporary particle-in-cell approach to laser-plasma modelling

T. D. Arber; K. Bennett; Christopher S. Brady; A. Lawrence-Douglas; Martin Ramsay; Nathan John Sircombe; P. Gillies; R. G. Evans; Holger Schmitz; A. R. Bell; C. P. Ridgers

Particle-in-cell (PIC) methods have a long history in the study of laser-plasma interactions. Early electromagnetic codes used the Yee staggered grid for field variables combined with a leapfrog EM-field update and the Boris algorithm for particle pushing. The general properties of such schemes are well documented. Modern PIC codes tend to add to these high-order shape functions for particles, Poisson preserving field updates, collisions, ionisation, a hybrid scheme for solid density and high-field QED effects. In addition to these physics packages, the increase in computing power now allows simulations with real mass ratios, full 3D dynamics and multi-speckle interaction. This paper presents a review of the core algorithms used in current laser-plasma specific PIC codes. Also reported are estimates of self-heating rates, convergence of collisional routines and test of ionisation models which are not readily available elsewhere. Having reviewed the status of PIC algorithms we present a summary of recent applications of such codes in laser-plasma physics, concentrating on SRS, short-pulse laser-solid interactions, fast-electron transport, and QED effects.


Physics of Plasmas | 2002

Measurements of ultrastrong magnetic fields during relativistic laser-plasma interactions

M. Tatarakis; A. Gopal; I. Watts; F. N. Beg; A. E. Dangor; K. Krushelnick; U. Wagner; P.A. Norreys; E.L. Clark; Matthew Zepf; R. G. Evans

Measurements of magnetic fields generated during ultrahigh intensity (>1019 W cm−2), short pulse (0.7–1 ps) laser–solid target interaction experiments are reported. An innovative method is used and the results are compared with particle-in-cell simulations. It is shown that polarization measurements of the self-generated harmonics of the laser can provide a convenient method for diagnosing the magnetic field—and that the experimental measurements indicate the existence of peak fields greater than 340 MG and below 460 MG at such high intensities. In particular, the observation of the X-wave cutoffs and the observed induced ellipticity of the harmonics can provide a reliable method for measuring these fields. These observations are important for evaluating the use of intense lasers in various potential applications and perhaps for understanding the complex physics of exotic astrophysical objects such as neutron stars.


Laser and Particle Beams | 2008

Effects of front surface plasma expansion on proton acceleration in ultraintense laser irradiation of foil targets

P. McKenna; D. C. Carroll; Olle Lundh; F. Nürnberg; K. Markey; S. Bandyopadhyay; D. Batani; R. G. Evans; R. Jafer; S. Kar; D. Neely; D. Pepler; M. N. Quinn; R. Redaelli; Markus Roth; C.-G. Wahlstrom; Xiaohui Yuan; Matthew Zepf

The properties of beams of high energy protons accelerated during ultraintense, picosecond laser-irradiation of thin foil targets are investigated as a function of preplasma expansion at the target front surface. Significant enhancement in the maximum proton energy and laser-to-proton energy conversion efficiency is observed at optimum preplasma density gradients, due to self-focusing of the incident laser pulse. For very long preplasma expansion, the propagating laser pulse is observed to filament, resulting in highly uniform proton beams, but with reduced flux and maximum energy.


Physics of Plasmas | 2008

Fast ignitor target studies for the HiPER project

S. Atzeni; A. Schiavi; J.J. Honrubia; X. Ribeyre; G. Schurtz; Ph. Nicolaï; M. Olazabal-Loumé; C. Bellei; R. G. Evans; J. R. Davies

Target studies for the proposed High Power Laser Energy Research (HiPER) facility [M. Dunne, Nature Phys. 2, 2 (2006)] are outlined and discussed. HiPER will deliver a 3ω (wavelength λ=0.35μm), multibeam, multi-ns pulse of about 250kJ and a 2ω or 3ω pulse of 70–100kJ in about 15ps. Its goal is the demonstration of laser driven inertial fusion via fast ignition. The baseline target concept is a direct-drive single shell capsule, ignited by hot electrons generated by a conically guided ultraintense laser beam. The paper first discusses ignition and compression requirements, and presents gain curves, based on an integrated model including ablative drive, compression, ignition and burn, and taking the coupling efficiency ηig of the igniting beam as a parameter. It turns out that ignition and moderate gain (up to 100) can be achieved, provided that adiabat shaping is used in the compression, and the efficiency ηig exceeds 20%. Using a standard ponderomotive scaling for the hot electron temperature, a 2ω or 3ω ...


Applied Physics Letters | 2005

Rapid heating of solid density material by a petawatt laser

R. G. Evans; E. L. Clark; R. T. Eagleton; A.M. Dunne; R. D. Edwards; W. J. Garbett; T. J. Goldsack; S. James; C. C. Smith; B. R. Thomas; R. J. Clarke; D. Neely; S. J. Rose

Time-resolved x-ray spectra from solid targets irradiated by the VULCAN Petawatt laser focused to 1020Wcm−2 show that material at solid density is heated to temperatures above 500 eV to a depth of about 15 μm and for a duration of more than 30 ps. Modeling with the implicit hybrid plasma code LSP shows that the heating is sensitive to the laser prepulse through resistive inhibition of the laser accelerated electrons in the blow off layer.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Exotic dense-matter states pumped by a relativistic laser plasma in the radiation-dominated regime

J. Colgan; J. Abdallah; A. Ya. Faenov; Sergey A. Pikuz; E. Wagenaars; N. Booth; O. Culfa; R. J. Dance; R. G. Evans; Robert Gray; T. Kaempfer; K. L. Lancaster; P. McKenna; A.L. Rossall; I. Yu. Skobelev; K.S. Schulze; I. Uschmann; A. Zhidkov; N. Woolsey

In high-spectral resolution experiments with the petawatt Vulcan laser, strong x-ray radiation of KK hollow atoms (atoms without n = 1 electrons) from thin Al foils was observed at pulse intensities of 3 × 10(20) W/cm(2). The observations of spectra from these exotic states of matter are supported by detailed kinetics calculations, and are consistent with a picture in which an intense polychromatic x-ray field, formed from Thomson scattering and bremsstrahlung in the electrostatic fields at the target surface, drives the KK hollow atom production. We estimate that this x-ray field has an intensity of >5 × 10(18) W/cm(2) and is in the 3 keV range.


Physics of Plasmas | 2008

Fast ignition relevant study of the flux of high intensity laser-generated electrons via a hollow cone into a laser-imploded plasma

M.H. Key; J. C. Adam; K. U. Akli; M. Borghesi; M. H. Chen; R. G. Evans; R. R. Freeman; H. Habara; S. P. Hatchett; J. M. Hill; A. Héron; J. A. King; R. Kodama; K. L. Lancaster; A. J. Mackinnon; P. K. Patel; T. G. Phillips; L. Romagnani; R. A. Snavely; R. Stephens; C. Stoeckl; R. P. J. Town; Y. Toyama; B. Zhang; Matthew Zepf; P. A. Norreys

An integrated experiment relevant to fast ignition . A Cu-doped deuterated polymer spherical shell target with an inserted hollow Au cone is imploded by a six-beam 900-J, 1-ns laser. A 10-ps, 70-J laser pulse is focused into the cone at the time of peak compression. The flux of high-energy electrons through the imploded material is determined from the yield of CuKα fluorescence by comparison with a Monte Carlo model. The electrons are estimated to carry about 15% of the laser energy. Collisional and Ohmic heating are modeled, and Ohmic effects are shown to be relatively unimportant. An electron spectrometer shows significantly greater reduction of the transmitted electron flux than is calculated in the model. Enhanced scattering by instability-induced magnetic fields is suggested. An extension of this fluor-based technique to measurement of coupling efficiency to the ignition hot spot in future larger-scale fast ignition experiments is outlined.


Physics of Plasmas | 2004

Integrated implosion/heating studies for advanced fast ignition

P.A. Norreys; K. L. Lancaster; C. D. Murphy; H. Habara; Stefan Karsch; R. J. Clarke; John Collier; R. Heathcote; C. Hemandez-Gomez; S. Hawkes; D. Neely; M. H. R. Hutchinson; R. G. Evans; M. Borghesi; L. Romagnani; Matthew Zepf; K. Akli; J.A. King; B. Zhang; R. R. Freeman; A. J. Mackinnon; S. P. Hatchett; P. K. Patel; Richard Adolph Snavely; M.H. Key; A. Nikroo; R. Stephens; C. Stoeckl; K. A. Tanaka; Takayoshi Norimatsu

Integrated experiments to investigate the ultrafast heating of implosions using cone/shell geometries have been performed at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory. The experiments used the 1054 nm, nanosecond, 0.9 kJ output of the VULCAN Nd:glass laser to drive 486 μm diameter, 6 μm wall thickness Cu-doped deuterated plastic (CD) shells in 6-beam cubic symmetry. Measurements of the opacity of the compressed plasma using two-dimensional spatially resolved Ti-Kα x-ray radiography suggest that densities of 4 g cm−3 and areal densities of 40 mg cm−2 were achieved at stagnation. Upper limits on the heating with both 1 ps and 10 ps pulses were deduced from the fluorescent yield from the Cu dopant. The data suggest that control of the preformed plasma scale-length inside the cone is necessary for efficient coupling to the compressed plasma.


Physics of Plasmas | 2010

Proton deflectometry of a magnetic reconnection geometry

L. Willingale; P.M. Nilson; Malte C. Kaluza; A. E. Dangor; R. G. Evans; P. Fernandes; M. G. Haines; Christos Kamperidis; R. J. Kingham; C. P. Ridgers; M. Sherlock; A. G. R. Thomas; Mingsheng Wei; Z. Najmudin; K. Krushelnick; S. Bandyopadhyay; M. Notley; S. Minardi; M. Tatarakis; W. Rozmus

Laser-driven magnetic reconnection is investigated using proton deflectometry. Two laser beams of nanosecond duration were focused in close proximity on a solid target to intensities of I∼1×1015 W cm−2. Through the well known ∇ne×∇Te mechanism, azimuthal magnetic fields are generated around each focal spot. During the expansion of the two plasmas, oppositely oriented field lines are brought together resulting in magnetic reconnection in the region between the two focal spots. The spatial scales and plasma parameters are consistent with the reconnection proceeding due to a Hall mechanism. An optimum focal spot separation for magnetic reconnection to occur is found to be ≈400±100 μm. Proton probing of the temporal evolution of the interaction shows the formation of the boundary layer between the two expanding plasma plumes and associated magnetic fields, as well as an instability later in the interaction. Such laboratory experiments provide an opportunity to investigate magnetic reconnection under unique co...

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A. E. Dangor

Imperial College London

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Matthew Zepf

Helmholtz Institute Jena

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K. L. Lancaster

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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P. McKenna

University of Strathclyde

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F. N. Beg

University of California

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Z. Najmudin

Imperial College London

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D. Neely

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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M. Notley

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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A. P. L. Robinson

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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