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Dive into the research topics where Robert R. Cross is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert R. Cross.


Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2008

High-average-power femto-petawatt laser pumped by the Mercury laser facility

A. Bayramian; James P. Armstrong; Glenn Beer; R. Campbell; Bruce H. T. Chai; Robert R. Cross; Alvin C. Erlandson; Yting Fei; Barry L. Freitas; Robert Kent; Joseph A. Menapace; William A. Molander; Kathleen I. Schaffers; C. W. Siders; S. Sutton; John B. Tassano; Steve Telford; Christopher A. Ebbers; John A. Caird; C. P. J. Barty

The Mercury laser system is a diode-pumped solid-state laser that has demonstrated over 60 J at a repetition rate of 10 Hz (600 W) of near-infrared light (1047 nm). Using a yttrium calcium oxyborate frequency converter, we have demonstrated 31.7 J/pulse at 10 Hz of second harmonic generation. The frequency converted Mercury laser system will pump a high-average-power Ti:sapphire chirped pulse amplifier system that will produce a compressed peak power > 1 PW and peak irradiance > 1023W/cm2.


Physics of Plasmas | 2004

PLEIADES: A picosecond Compton scattering x-ray source for advanced backlighting and time-resolved material studies

D. J. Gibson; S. G. Anderson; C. P. J. Barty; S. M. Betts; Rex Booth; Winthrop J. Brown; John K. Crane; Robert R. Cross; D. N. Fittinghoff; Fred Hartemann; Jaroslav Kuba; Gregory Peter Le Sage; Dennis R. Slaughter; A. Tremaine; Alan Wootton; Edward P. Hartouni; P. T. Springer; J. B. Rosenzweig

The PLEIADES (Picosecond Laser-Electron Inter-Action for the Dynamical Evaluation of Structures) facility has produced first light at 70 keV. This milestone offers a new opportunity to develop laser-driven, compact, tunable x-ray sources for critical applications such as diagnostics for the National Ignition Facility and time-resolved material studies. The electron beam was focused to 50 μm rms, at 57 MeV, with 260 pC of charge, a relative energy spread of 0.2%, and a normalized emittance of 5 mm mrad horizontally and 13 mm mrad vertically. The scattered 820 nm laser pulse had an energy of 180 mJ and a duration of 54 fs. Initial x rays were captured with a cooled charge-coupled device using a cesium iodide scintillator; the peak photon energy was approximately 78 keV, with a total x-ray flux of 1.3×106 photons/shot, and the observed angular distribution found to agree very well with three-dimensional codes. Simple K-edge radiography of a tantalum foil showed good agreement with the theoretical divergence-...


Fusion Science and Technology | 2009

ND:GLASS LASER DESIGN FOR LASER ICF FISSION ENERGY (LIFE)

John A. Caird; Vivek Agrawal; A. Bayramian; Ray Beach; J.A. Britten; Diana Chen; Robert R. Cross; Christopher A. Ebbers; Alvin C. Erlandson; Michael D. Feit; Barry L. Freitas; Chuni Ghosh; C. Haefner; Doug Homoelle; Tony Ladran; Jeff Latkowski; William A. Molander; J. R. Murray; Sasha Rubenchik; Kathleen I. Schaffers; Craig W. Siders; Eddy A. Stappaerts; S. Sutton; Steve Telford; John B. Trenholme; Christopher Barty

Abstract We have developed preliminary conceptual laser system designs for the Laser ICF (Inertial Confinement Fusion) Fission Energy (LIFE) application. Our approach leverages experience in high-energy Nd: glass laser technology developed for the National Ignition Facility (NIF)1, along with high-energy-class diode-pumped solid-state laser (HEC-DPSSL) technology developed for the DOE’s High Average Power Laser (HAPL) Program and embodied LLNL’s Mercury laser system.2 We present laser system designs suitable for both indirect-drive, hot spot ignition and indirect-drive, fast ignition targets. Main amplifiers for both systems use laser-diode-pumped Nd:glass slabs oriented at Brewster’s angle, as in NIF, but the slabs are much thinner to allow for cooling by high-velocity helium gas as in the Mercury laser system. We also describe a plan to mass-produce pump-diode lasers to bring diode costs down to the order of


Laser and Particle Beams | 2004

Characterization of a bright, tunable, ultrafast Compton scattering X-ray source

Frederic V. Hartemann; A. Tremaine; S. G. Anderson; C. P. J. Barty; S. M. Betts; Rex Booth; Winthrop J. Brown; John K. Crane; Robert R. Cross; D. J. Gibson; D. N. Fittinghoff; Jaroslav Kuba; G.P. Le Sage; Dennis R. Slaughter; Alan Wootton; Edward P. Hartouni; P. T. Springer; J. B. Rosenzweig; A.K. Kerman

0.01 per Watt of peak output power, as needed to make the LIFE application economically attractive.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Precision linac and laser technologies for nuclear photonics gamma-ray sourcesa)

Felicie Albert; Frederic V. Hartemann; S. G. Anderson; Robert R. Cross; D. J. Gibson; J. Hall; R. A. Marsh; M. Messerly; S. S. Wu; C. W. Siders; C. P. J. Barty

The Compton scattering of a terawatt-class, femtosecond laser pulse by a high-brightness, relativistic electron beam has been demonstrated as a viable approach toward compact, tunable sources of bright, femtosecond, hard X-ray flashes. The main focus of this article is a detailed description of such a novel X-ray source, namely the PLEIADES (Picosecond Laser–Electron Inter-Action for the Dynamical Evaluation of Structures) facility at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. PLEIADES has produced first light at 70 keV, thus enabling critical applications, such as advanced backlighting for the National Ignition Facility and in situ time-resolved studies of high- Z materials. To date, the electron beam has been focused down to σ x = σ y = 27 μm rms, at 57 MeV, with 266 pC of charge, a relative energy spread of 0.2%, a normalized horizontal emittance of 3.5 mm·mrad, a normalized vertical emittance of 11 mm·mrad, and a duration of 3 ps rms. The compressed laser pulse energy at focus is 480 mJ, the pulse duration 54 fs Intensity Full Width at Half-Maximum (IFWHM), and the 1/ e 2 radius 36 μm. Initial X rays produced by head-on collisions between the laser and electron beams at a repetition rate of 10 Hz were captured with a cooled CCD using a CsI scintillator; the peak photon energy was approximately 78 keV, and the observed angular distribution was found to agree very well with three-dimensional codes. The current X-ray dose is 3 × 10 6 photons per pulse, and the inferred peak brightness exceeds 10 15 photons/(mm 2 × mrad 2 × s × 0.1% bandwidth). Spectral measurements using calibrated foils of variable thickness are consistent with theory. Measurements of the X-ray dose as a function of the delay between the laser and electron beams show a 24-ps full width at half maximum (FWHM) window, as predicted by theory, in contrast with a measured timing jitter of 1.2 ps, which contributes to the stability of the source. In addition, K -edge radiographs of a Ta foil obtained at different electron beam energies clearly demonstrate the γ 2 -tunability of the source and show very good agreement with the theoretical divergence-angle dependence of the X-ray spectrum. Finally, electron bunch shortening experiments using velocity compression have also been performed and durations as short as 300 fs rms have been observed using coherent transition radiation; the corresponding inferred peak X-ray flux approaches 10 19 photons/s.


Fourth-Generation X-Ray Sources and Ultrafast X-Ray Detectors | 2004

Subpicosecond streak camera measurements at LLNL: from IR to x-rays

Jaroslav Kuba; R. Shepherd; Rex Booth; R. E. Stewart; Edward Chin Wang Lee; Patrick Audebert; John K. Crane; Robert R. Cross; James Dunn; P. T. Springer

Tunable, high precision gamma-ray sources are under development to enable nuclear photonics, an emerging field of research. This paper focuses on the technological and theoretical challenges related to precision Compton scattering gamma-ray sources. In this scheme, incident laser photons are scattered and Doppler upshifted by a high brightness electron beam to generate tunable and highly collimated gamma-ray pulses. The electron and laser beam parameters can be optimized to achieve the spectral brightness and narrow bandwidth required by nuclear photonics applications. A description of the design of the next generation precision gamma-ray source currently under construction at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is presented, along with the underlying motivations. Within this context, high-gradient X-band technology, used in conjunction with fiber-based photocathode drive laser and diode pumped solid-state interaction laser technologies, will be shown to offer optimal performance for high gamma-ray spe...


Presented at: SPIE International Symposium on Optical Science and Technology, San Diego, CA, United States, Aug 03 - Aug 08, 2003 | 2003

PLEIADES: High Peak Brightness, Subpicosecond Thomson Hard-X-ray source

Jaroslav Kuba; S. G. Anderson; Chris Barty; S. M. Betts; Rex Booth; Winthrop J. Brown; John K. Crane; Robert R. Cross; D. N. Fittinghoff; D. J. Gibson; Frederic V. Hartemann; Greg P. Le Sage; J. B. Rosenzweig; A. Tremaine; P. T. Springer

An ultra fast, sub-picosecond resolution streak camera has been recently developed at the LLNL. The camera is a versatile instrument with a wide operating wavelength range. The temporal resolution of up to 300 fs can be achieved, with routine operation at 500 fs. The streak camera has been operated in a wide wavelength range from IR to x-rays up to 2 keV. In this paper we briefly review the main design features that result in the unique properties of the streak camera and present its several scientific applications: (1) Streak camera characterization using a Michelson interferometer in visible range, (2) temporally resolved study of a transient x-ray laser at 14.7 nm, which enabled us to vary the x-ray laser pulse duration from ~2-6 ps by changing the pump laser parameters, and (3) an example of a time-resolved spectroscopy experiment with the streak camera.


Proceedings of the 2003 Particle Accelerator Conference | 2003

Generation of high brightness x-rays with the PLEIADES Thomson x-ray source

Winthrop J. Brown; S. G. Anderson; C. P. J. Barty; John K. Crane; Robert R. Cross; D. N. Fittinghoff; Frederic V. Hartemann; Jaroslav Kuba; G.P. Le Sage; Dennis R. Slaughter; P. T. Springer; A. Tremaine; J. B. Rosenzweig; D.J. Gibson

The Picosecond Laser-Electron Inter-Action for the Dynamic Evaluation of Structures (PLEIADES) facility, is a unique, novel, tunable (10-200 keV), ultrafast (ps-fs), hard x-ray source that greatly extends the parameter range reached by existing 3rd generation sources, both in terms of x-ray energy range, pulse duration, and peak brightness at high energies. First light was observed at 70 keV early in 2003, and the experimental data agrees with 3D codes developed at LLNL. The x-rays are generated by the interaction of a 50 fs Fourier-transform-limited laser pulse produced by the TW-class FALCON CPA laser and a highly focused, relativistic (20-100 MeV), high brightness (1 nC, 0.3-5 ps, 5 mm.mrad 0.2% energy spread) photo-electron bunch. The resulting x-ray brightness is expected to exceed 1020 ph/mm2/s/mrad2/0.1% BW. The beam is well-collimated (10 mrad divergence over the full spectrum, 1 mrad for a single color), and the source is a unique tool for time-resolved dynamic measurements in matter, including high-Z materials.


High-power lasers and applications | 2003

PLEIADES: a subpicosecond Thomson x-ray source for ultrafast materials probing

D. N. Fittinghoff; P. T. Springer; C. P. J. Barty; Winthrop J. Brown; John K. Crane; Robert R. Cross; T. Ditmire; D.J. Gibson; Frederic V. Hartemann; Gregory Peter Le Sage; J. B. Rosenzweig; Dennis R. Slaughter; Fred Streitz; A. Tremaine; S. Anderson; Jaroslav Kuba; Rex Booth; John A. Moriarty; Andy McMahan; Hyunchae Cynn; Choong-Shik Yoo

The use of short laser pulses to generate high peak intensity, ultra-short x-ray pulses enables exciting new experimental capabilities, such as femtosecond pump-probe experiments used to temporally resolve material structural dynamics on atomic time scales. PLEIADES (Picosecond Laser Electron InterAction for the Dynamic Evaluation of Structures) is a next generation Thomson scattering x-ray source being developed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). Ultra-fast picosecond x-rays (10-200 keV) are generated by colliding an energetic electron beam (20-100 MeV) with a high intensity, sub-ps, 800 nm laser pulse. The peak brightness of the source is expected to exceed 10/sup 20/ photons/s/0.1% bandwidth/nm/sup 2//mrad/sup 2/. Simulations of the electron beam production, transport, and final focus are presented. Electron beam measurements, including emittance and final focus spot size are also presented and compared to simulation results. Measurements of x-ray production are also reported and compared to theoretical calculations.


Frontiers in Optics | 2003

PLEIADES: Generation of ultrashort X-ray pulses by inverse Compton scattering

David N. Fittinghoff; Scott L. Anderson; C. P. J. Barty; Rex Booth; Winthrop J. Brown; John K. Crane; Robert R. Cross; D. J. Gibson; Frederic V. Hartemann; Jaroslav Kuba; A. Tremaine; P. T. Springer

The use of ultrafast laser pulses to generate very high brightness, ultrashort (10-14 to 10-12 s) pulses of x-rays is a topic of great interest to the x-ray user community. In principle, femtosecond-scale pump-probe experiments can be used to temporally resolve structural dynamics of materials on the time scale of atomic motion. However, further development of this field is severely hindered by the absence of a suitably intense x-ray source that would drive the development of improved experimental techniques and establish a broader range of applicability. We report on a project at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory to produce a novel x-ray source and essential experimental techniques that will enable unprecedented dynamic measurements in matter. Based on scattering of a sub-50-fs, multi-terawatt, multi-beam laser from a co-synchronous and highly focused relativistic electron bunch, PLEIADES (Picosecond Laser Electron Interaction for Dynamic Evaluation of Structures) will produce tunable, ultrafast, hard x-ray (10- 200 keV) probes that greatly exceed existing 3rd generation synchrotron sources in speed (100 fs - 1 ps), peak brightness (1020 ph/mm2s mrad2 0.1% BW, and >109 ph/pulse), and simplicity (100-fold smaller). Such bright, ultrafast high energy x-rays will enable pump-probe experiments using radiography, dynamic diffraction, and spectroscopy to address the equation of state and dynamics of phase transitions and structure in laser heated and compressed heavy dense metals of interest for materials science.

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John K. Crane

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Frederic V. Hartemann

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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P. T. Springer

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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C. P. J. Barty

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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A. Tremaine

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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D. J. Gibson

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Jaroslav Kuba

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Winthrop J. Brown

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Dennis R. Slaughter

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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