Sudeep Banerjee
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
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Featured researches published by Sudeep Banerjee.
Applied Physics Letters | 2001
Koshichi Nemoto; Anatoly Maksimchuk; Sudeep Banerjee; K. Flippo; G. Mourou; Donald P. Umstadter; B. Yu. Bychenkov
We have observed deuterons accelerated to energies of about 2 MeV in the interaction of relativistically intense 10 TW, 400 fs laser pulse with a thin layer of deuterated polystyrene deposited on Mylar film. These high-energy deuterons were directed to the boron sample, where they produced ∼105 atoms of positron active isotope 11C from the reaction 10B(d,n)11C. The activation results suggest that deuterons were accelerated from the front surface of the target.
Physics of Plasmas | 2002
Sudeep Banerjee; Anthony R. Valenzuela; Rahul Shah; Anatoly Maksimchuk; Donald P. Umstadter
High harmonics generated due to the scattering of relativistic electrons from high intensity laser light is studied. The experiments are carried out with an Nd:Glass laser system with a peak intensity of 2×1018 W cm−2 in underdense plasma. It is shown that, at high intensities, when the normalized electric field approaches unity, in addition to the conventional atomic harmonics from bound electrons there is significant contribution to the harmonic spectrum from free electrons. The characteristic signatures of this are found to be the emission of even order harmonics, linear dependence on the electron density, significant amount of harmonics even with circular polarization and a much smaller spatial region over which these harmonics are produced as compared to the atomic case. Imaging of the harmonic beam shows that it is emitted in a narrow cone with a divergence of 2 to 3 degrees.
Optics Letters | 2014
Cheng Liu; Grigory Golovin; Shouyuan Chen; Jun Zhang; Baozhen Zhao; Daniel Haden; Sudeep Banerjee; Jack Silano; H. J. Karwowski; Donald P. Umstadter
Gamma-ray photons with energy >9 MeV were produced when second-harmonic-generated laser light (3 eV) inverse-Compton-scattered from a counterpropagating relativistic (~450 MeV) laser-wakefield-accelerated electron beam. Two laser pulses from the same laser system were used: one to accelerate electrons and one to scatter. Since the two pulses play very different roles in the γ-ray generation process, and thus have different requirements, a novel laser system was developed. It separately and independently optimized the optical properties of the two pulses. This approach also mitigated the deleterious effects on beam focusing that generally accompany nonlinear optics at high peak-power levels.
Physics of Plasmas | 2012
Sudeep Banerjee; Nathan Powers; Vidiya Ramanathan; Isaac Ghebregziabher; Kevin Brown; Chakra M. Maharjan; Shouyuan Chen; Arnaud Beck; E. Lefebvre; Serguei Y. Kalmykov; Bradley Allan Shadwick; Donald P. Umstadter
In this paper, we present results on a scalable high-energy electron source based on laser wakefield acceleration. The electron accelerator using 30–80 TW, 30 fs laser pulses, operates in the blowout regime, and produces high-quality, quasi-monoenergetic electron beams in the range 100–800 MeV. These beams have angular divergence of 1–4 mrad, and 5%–25% energy spread, with a resulting brightness 1011 electrons mm−2 MeV−1 mrad−2. The beam parameters can be tuned by varying the laser and plasma conditions. The use of a high-quality laser pulse and appropriate target conditions enables optimization of beam quality, concentrating a significant fraction of the accelerated charge into the quasi-monoenergetic component.
Optics Letters | 2014
Cheng Liu; Jun Zhang; Shouyuan Chen; Grigory Golovin; Sudeep Banerjee; Baozhen Zhao; Nathan Powers; Isaac Ghebregziabher; Donald P. Umstadter
Fourier-transform-limited light pulses were obtained at the laser-plasma interaction point of a 100-TW peak-power laser in vacuum. The spectral-phase distortion induced by the dispersion mismatching between the stretcher, compressor, and dispersive materials was fully compensated for by means of an adaptive closed-loop. The coherent temporal contrast on the sub-picosecond time scale was two orders of magnitude higher than that without adaptive control. This novel phase control capability enabled the experimental study of the dependence of laser wakefield acceleration on the spectral phase of intense laser light.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2013
Cheng Liu; Sudeep Banerjee; Jun Zhang; Shouyuan Chen; Kevin Brown; Jared Mills; Nathan Powers; Baozhen Zhao; Gregory Golovin; Isaac Ghebregziabher; Donald P. Umstadter
A repetitive petawatt-class Ti:sapphire laser system operating with high spatial and temporal beam quality is demonstrated. Maximum pulse energy of 30 J is obtained via five multi-pass amplification stages. Closed-loop feedback control systems in the temporal and spatial domains are used to yield Fourier-transform-limited pulse duration (33.7 fs), and diffraction-limited focal spot sizes (with several different tight focusing optics). The laser parameters have been fully characterized at high-power, and are monitored in real-time, to ensure that they meet the experimental requirements for laser-wakefield electron acceleration and x-ray generation.
Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2003
Sudeep Banerjee; Anthony R. Valenzuela; Rahul Shah; Anatoly Maksimchuk; Donald P. Umstadter
Results are presented on the generation of high harmonics through the scattering of relativistic electrons from high-intensity laser light. The characteristic signatures of this process are found to be the emission of even-order harmonics, linear dependence on the electron density, significant amount of harmonics with circular polarization, and small spatial extent of the source. The harmonics are emitted as a forward-directed beam with a divergence of 2°–3°. The measured spatial profile of the harmonics is in excellent agreement with calculations that assume that relativistic electrons play a significant part in the scattering process.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Grigory Golovin; Sudeep Banerjee; Chih-Ray Liu; Shouyuan Chen; J. Zhang; Baozhen Zhao; Ping Zhang; Matthew C. Veale; Matthew D. Wilson; P. Seller; Donald P. Umstadter
The recent combination of ultra-intense lasers and laser-accelerated electron beams is enabling the development of a new generation of compact x-ray light sources, the coherence of which depends directly on electron beam emittance. Although the emittance of accelerated electron beams can be low, it can grow due to the effects of space charge during free-space propagation. Direct experimental measurement of this important property is complicated by micron-scale beam sizes, and the presence of intense fields at the location where space charge acts. Reported here is a novel, non-destructive, single-shot method that overcame this problem. It employed an intense laser probe pulse, and spectroscopic imaging of the inverse-Compton scattered x-rays, allowing measurement of an ultra-low value for the normalized transverse emittance, 0.15 (±0.06) π mm mrad, as well as study of its subsequent growth upon exiting the accelerator. The technique and results are critical for designing multi-stage laser-wakefield accelerators, and generating high-brightness, spatially coherent x-rays.
Optics Express | 2014
Baozhen Zhao; Jun Zhang; Shouyuan Chen; Cheng Liu; Grigory Golovin; Sudeep Banerjee; Kevin Brown; Jared Mills; Chad Petersen; Donald P. Umstadter
We demonstrate wavefront correction of terawatt-peak-power laser beams at two distinct and well-separated wavelengths. Simultaneous near diffraction-limited focusability is achieved for both the fundamental (800 nm) and second harmonic (400 nm) of Ti:sapphire-amplified laser light. By comparing the relative effectiveness of various correction loops, the optimal ones are found. Simultaneous correction of both beams of different color relies on the linear proportionality between their wavefront aberrations. This method can enable two-color experiments at relativistic intensities.
Applied Optics | 2015
Grigory Golovin; Sudeep Banerjee; J. Zhang; Shouyuan Chen; Cheng Liu; Baozhen Zhao; Jared Mills; Kevin Brown; Chad Petersen; Donald P. Umstadter
We report experimental results on the production and characterization of asymmetric and composite supersonic gas flows, created by merging independently controllable flows from multiple nozzles. We demonstrate that the spatial profiles are adjustable over a large range of parameters, including gas density, density gradient, and atomic composition. The profiles were precisely characterized using three-dimensional tomography. The creation and measurement of complex gas flows is relevant to numerous applications, ranging from laser-produced plasmas to rocket thrusters.