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Dive into the research topics where S. D. Kraft is active.

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Featured researches published by S. D. Kraft.


New Journal of Physics | 2010

The scaling of proton energies in ultrashort pulse laser plasma acceleration

K. Zeil; S. D. Kraft; S. Bock; M. Bussmann; T. E. Cowan; T. Kluge; Josefine Metzkes; T. Richter; R. Sauerbrey; U. Schramm

This paper presents a systematic investigation of an ultrashort pulse laser acceleration of protons that yields unprecedented maximum proton energies of 17MeV at a table-top Ti:sapphire laser power level of 100TW. For plain few- micron-thick foil targets, a linear scaling of the maximum proton energy with laser power is observed and this is attributed to the short acceleration period close to the target rear surface. Although excellent laser pulse contrast was available, slight deformations of the target rear were found to lead to a predictable shift of the direction of the energetic proton emission away from the target normal that could be used for better discrimination of the low-energy part of the spectrum.


New Journal of Physics | 2010

Dose-dependent biological damage of tumour cells by laser-accelerated proton beams

S. D. Kraft; C. Richter; K. Zeil; Michael Baumann; Elke Beyreuther; S. Bock; M. Bussmann; T. E. Cowan; Y Dammene; W. Enghardt; U. Helbig; L. Karsch; T. Kluge; L. Laschinsky; E Lessmann; Josefine Metzkes; D. Naumburger; R. Sauerbrey; M. Schürer; M. Sobiella; J Woithe; U. Schramm; Jörg Pawelke

We report on the first irradiation of in vitro tumour cells with laser-accelerated proton pulses showing dose-dependent biological damage. This experiment, paving the way for future radiobiological studies with laser-accelerated protons, demonstrates the simultaneous availability of all the components indispensable for systematic radiobiological studies: a laser-plasma accelerator providing proton spectra with maximum energy exceeding 15MeV and applicable doses of a few Gy within a few minutes; a beam transport and filtering system; an in-air irradiation site; and a dosimetry system providing both online dose monitoring and absolute dose information applied to the cell sample and the full infrastructure for analysing radiation-induced damage in cells.


Physical Review Letters | 2002

Sympathetic cooling with two atomic species in an optical trap

M. Mudrich; S. D. Kraft; Kilian Singer; R. Grimm; A. Mosk; M. Weidemüller

We simultaneously trap ultracold lithium and cesium atoms in an optical dipole trap formed by the focus of a CO2 laser and study the exchange of thermal energy between the gases. The optically cooled cesium gas efficiently decreases the temperature of the lithium gas through sympathetic cooling. Equilibrium temperatures down to 25 microK have been reached. The measured cross section for thermalizing 133Cs-7Li collisions is 8 x 10(-12) cm(2), for both species unpolarized in their lowest hyperfine ground state. Besides thermalization, we observe evaporation of lithium purely through elastic cesium-lithium collisions (sympathetic evaporation).


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010

Absolute charge calibration of scintillating screens for relativistic electron detection

Alexander Buck; K. Zeil; Antonia Popp; Karl Schmid; A. Jochmann; S. D. Kraft; Bernhard Hidding; T. Kudyakov; Christopher M. S. Sears; Laszlo Veisz; Stefan Karsch; J. Pawelke; R. Sauerbrey; T. E. Cowan; Ferenc Krausz; U. Schramm

We report on new charge calibrations and linearity tests with high-dynamic range for eight different scintillating screens typically used for the detection of relativistic electrons from laser-plasma based acceleration schemes. The absolute charge calibration was done with picosecond electron bunches at the ELBE linear accelerator in Dresden. The lower detection limit in our setup for the most sensitive scintillating screen (KODAK Biomax MS) was 10 fC/mm(2). The screens showed a linear photon-to-charge dependency over several orders of magnitude. An onset of saturation effects starting around 10-100 pC/mm(2) was found for some of the screens. Additionally, a constant light source was employed as a luminosity reference to simplify the transfer of a one-time absolute calibration to different experimental setups.


Journal of Physics B | 2006

Formation of ultracold LiCs molecules

S. D. Kraft; Peter Staanum; Jörg Lange; L. Vogel; M. Weidemüller

We present the first observation of ultracold LiCs molecules. The molecules are formed in a two-species magneto-optical trap and detected by two-photon ionization and time-of-flight mass spectrometry. The production rate coefficient is found to be in the range 10−18 cm3 s−1 to 10−16 cm3 s−1, at least an order of magnitude smaller than for other heteronuclear diatomic molecules directly formed in a magneto-optical trap.


Applied Physics B | 2001

Mixture of ultracold lithium and cesium atoms in an optical dipole trap

A. Mosk; S. D. Kraft; M. Mudrich; Kilian Singer; Wendel Wohlleben; R. Grimm; M. Weidemüller

Abstract.We present the first simultaneous trapping of two different ultracold atomic species in a conservative trap. Lithium and cesium atoms are stored in an optical dipole trap formed by the focus of a CO2 laser. Techniques for loading both species of atoms are discussed and observations of elastic and inelastic collisions between the two species are presented. A model for sympathetic cooling of two species with strongly different mass in the presence of slow evaporation is developed. From the observed Cs-induced evaporation of Li atoms we estimate a cross-section for cold elastic Li-Cs collisions.


Medical Physics | 2012

Dose rate dependence for different dosimeters and detectors: TLD, OSL, EBT films, and diamond detectors

L. Karsch; Elke Beyreuther; T. Burris-Mog; S. D. Kraft; Christian Richter; K. Zeil; J. Pawelke

PURPOSE The use of laser accelerators in radiation therapy can perhaps increase the low number of proton and ion therapy facilities in some years due to the low investment costs and small size. The laser-based acceleration technology leads to a very high peak dose rate of about 10(11) Gy∕s. A first dosimetric task is the evaluation of dose rate dependence of clinical dosimeters and other detectors. METHODS The measurements were done at ELBE, a superconductive linear electron accelerator which generates electron pulses with 5 ps length at 20 MeV. The different dose rates are reached by adjusting the number of electrons in one beam pulse. Three clinical dosimeters (TLD, OSL, and EBT radiochromic films) were irradiated with four different dose rates and nearly the same dose. A faraday cup, an integrating current transformer, and an ionization chamber were used to control the particle flux on the dosimeters. Furthermore two diamond detectors were tested. RESULTS The dosimeters are dose rate independent up to 4●10(9) Gy∕s within 2% (OSL and TLD) and up to 15●10(9) Gy∕s within 5% (EBT films). The diamond detectors show strong dose rate dependence. CONCLUSIONS TLD, OSL dosimeters, and EBT films are suitable for pulsed beams with a very high pulse dose rate like laser accelerated particle beams.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010

Absolute response of Fuji imaging plate detectors to picosecond-electron bunches

K. Zeil; S. D. Kraft; A. Jochmann; F. Kroll; W. Jahr; U. Schramm; L. Karsch; J. Pawelke; Bernhard Hidding; G. Pretzler

The characterization of the absolute number of electrons generated by laser wakefield acceleration often relies on absolutely calibrated FUJI imaging plates (IP), although their validity in the regime of extreme peak currents is untested. Here, we present an extensive study on the dependence of the sensitivity of BAS-SR and BAS-MS IP to picosecond electron bunches of varying charge of up to 60 pC, performed at the electron accelerator ELBE, making use of about three orders of magnitude of higher peak intensity than in prior studies. We demonstrate that the response of the IPs shows no saturation effect and that the BAS-SR IP sensitivity of 0.0081 photostimulated luminescence per electron number confirms surprisingly well data from previous works. However, the use of the identical readout system and handling procedures turned out to be crucial and, if unnoticed, may be an important error source.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2011

A dosimetric system for quantitative cell irradiation experiments with laser-accelerated protons

Christian Richter; L. Karsch; Y Dammene; S. D. Kraft; Josefine Metzkes; U. Schramm; M. Schürer; M. Sobiella; A Weber; K. Zeil; Jörg Pawelke

An integrated dosimetry and cell irradiation system (IDOCIS) with laser-accelerated proton beams was developed, characterized, calibrated and successfully used for systematic in vitro experiments. Due to the broad exponentially shaped energy spectrum, the low-energy range of the protons (<20 MeV) and the high pulse dose, the absolute dosimetry for this beam quality is challenging. Therefore, a dedicated Faraday cup is used as an energy and dose rate independent absolute dosimeter that has been calibrated consistently with three independent methods. A transmission ionization chamber providing online relative dose information is cross-calibrated against the Faraday cup. Providing both online and absolute dose information, the IDOCIS allows for quantitative dosimetric and radiobiological studies at current low-energy laser-accelerated proton beams. Finally, first dosimetric characterizations of a laser-accelerated proton beam with the IDOCIS are presented.


Physics of Plasmas | 2010

Enhanced laser ion acceleration from mass-limited foils

T. Kluge; W. Enghardt; S. D. Kraft; U. Schramm; K. Zeil; T. E. Cowan; M. Bussmann

This paper reports on simulations of solid mass-limited targets (MLT) via electrodynamic two-dimensional, three velocity component particle-in-cell simulations. The interaction with long (300 fs) high intensity (1020 W/cm2) laser pulses with targets of diameter down to 1 μm is described in detail with respect to electron dynamics and proton and ion acceleration. Depending on the foil diameter, different effects consecutively arise. Electrons laterally recirculate within the target, smoothening the target rear accelerating sheath and increasing the hot electron density and temperature. Our results suggest that the most significant ion energy enhancement should be expected for MLT with diameter below the laser focal spot size. The spread of energetic protons is decreased for medium sized foils while it is greatly increased for foils of size near the focal spot size.

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U. Schramm

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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K. Zeil

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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T. E. Cowan

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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T. Kluge

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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Josefine Metzkes

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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M. Bussmann

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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S. Bock

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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L. Karsch

Dresden University of Technology

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Roland Sauerbrey

Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

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