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Dive into the research topics where W. M. Wang is active.

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Featured researches published by W. M. Wang.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Strong terahertz radiation from relativistic laser interaction with solid density plasmas

Y. T. Li; Cuncheng Li; M. Zhou; W. M. Wang; Fei Du; Wenjun Ding; X. X. Lin; F. Q. Liu; Z. M. Sheng; Xiao-Yu Peng; L. M. Chen; Juan Ma; X. Lu; Z. H. Wang; Zuo Wei; Jie Zhang

We report a plasma-based strong THz source generated in intense laser-solid interactions at relativistic intensities > 10(18) W/cm(2). Energies up to 50 mu J/sr per THz pulse is observed when the laser pulses are incident onto a copper foil at 67.5 degrees. The temporal properties of the THz radiation are measured by a single shot, electro-optic sampling method with a chirped laser pulse. The THz radiation is attributed to the self-organized transient fast electron currents formed along the target surface. Such a source allows potential applications in THz nonlinear physics and provides a diagnostic of transient currents generated in intense laser-solid interactions


Optics Express | 2011

Enhanced K α output of Ar and Kr using size optimized cluster target irradiated by high-contrast laser pulses

L. Zhang; L. M. Chen; Yuan Dw; W. C. Yan; Z. H. Wang; Cheng Liu; Shen Zw; Anatoly Ya. Faenov; T. A. Pikuz; Igor Yu. Skobelev; Gasilov; Boldarev A; Mao Jy; Y. T. Li; Q. L. Dong; X. Lu; Juan Ma; W. M. Wang; Z. M. Sheng; Jie Zhang

We observed that increasing the clusters size and laser pulse contrast can enhance the X-ray flux emitted by femtosecond-laser-driven-cluster plasma. By focusing a high contrast laser (10(-10)) on large argon clusters, high flux Kα-like X-rays (around 2.96 keV) is generated with a total flux of 2.5 × 10(11) photons/J in 4π and a conversion efficiency of 1.2 × 10-4. In the case of large Kr clusters, the best total flux for L-shell X-rays is 5.3 × 1011 photons/J with a conversion efficiency of 1.3 × 10-4 and, for the Kα X-ray (12.7 keV), it is 8 × 10(8) photons/J with a conversion efficiency of 1.6 × 10-6. Using this X-ray source, a single-shot high-performance X-ray imaging is demonstrated.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Gravity increase before the 2015 Mw 7.8 Nepal earthquake

Shi Chen; Mian Liu; Lelin Xing; Weimin Xu; W. M. Wang; Yiqing Zhu; Hui Li

The 25 April 2015 Nepal earthquake (Mw 7.8) ruptured a segment of the Himalayan front fault zone. Four absolute gravimetric stations in southern Tibet, surveyed from 2010/2011 to 2013 and corrected for secular variations, recorded up to 22.40u2009±u20091.11u2009μGal/yr of gravity increase during this period. The gravity increase is distinct from the long-wavelength secular trends of gravity decrease over the Tibetan Plateau and may be related to interseismic mass change around the locked plate interface under the Himalayan-Tibetan Plateau. We modeled the source region as a disk of 580u2009km in diameter, which is consistent with the notion that much of the southern Tibetan crust is involved in storing strain energy that drives the Himalayan earthquakes. If validated in other regions, high-precision ground measurements of absolute gravity may provide a useful method for monitoring mass changes in the source regions of potential large earthquakes.


Applied Physics Letters | 2015

Strong magnetic fields generated with a simple open-ended coil irradiated by high power laser pulses

Beibei Zhu; Yi Li; Dawei Yuan; Yifei Li; Fang Li; Guoqian Liao; J. R. Zhao; Jia-Yong Zhong; F. B. Xue; Shukai He; Weiwu Wang; Feng Lu; Faqiang Zhang; Lei Yang; Kainan Zhou; Na Xie; Wei Hong; Huigang Wei; Kai Zhang; Bo Han; Xiaoxing Pei; Chang Liu; Z. D. Zhang; W. M. Wang; Jianqiang Zhu; Y. Q. Gu; Zongqing Zhao; B. H. Zhang; G. Zhao; Jie Zhang

A simple scheme to produce strong magnetic fields due to cold electron flow in an open-ended coil heated by high power laser pulses is proposed. It differs from previous generation of magnetic fields driven by fast electron current in a capacitor-coil target [S. Fujioka et al., Sci. Rep. 3, 1170 (2013)]. The fields in our experiments are measured by B-dot detectors and proton radiography, respectively. A 205u2009T strong magnetic field at the center of the coil target is generated in the free space at Iλ2 of 6.85u2009×u20091014u2009Wu2009cm−2u2009μm2, where I is the laser intensity, and λ is the laser wavelength. The magnetic field strength is proportional to Iλ2. Compared with the capacitor-coil target, the generation mechanism of the magnetic field is straightforward and the coil is easy to be fabricated.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Study on the characteristics of a two gap capillary discharge

Dong Huang; Lanjun Yang; Peng Huo; J. B. Ma; W. D. Ding; W. M. Wang

The paper presents a new two-gap capillary (TGC) discharge structure. The prominent innovation is the introduction of the middle electrode, which divides the capillary into the trigger gap and the main gap. The discharge circuit of the TGC comprises the trigger circuit and the main circuit. The two circuits are used for the pre-ionization of the trigger gap and providing energy of 450 J for the main gap arc discharging, respectively. When the discharge initiates, the trigger gap is pre-ionized under high voltage pulse produced by trigger circuit, and meanwhile, the weakly ionized plasma is generated. The main circuit then maintains the expansion of the plasma, which is called soft capillary discharge. Afterwards, the main gap is shorted and discharges under a relatively low voltage. With the optimization of the circuit parameter, both the energy deposition ratio in main gap and the degree of plasma ionization are enhanced. The efficiency of the energy deposition is almost twice higher compared with that of the conventional capillary structure. The life performance test indicates that the erosion of the middle electrode and the trigger gap carbonization are the key factors that limit the life performance of the TGC.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

Note: A new angle-resolved proton energy spectrometer

Yong-Tang Zheng; LuNing Su; M. Liu; B. C. Liu; Zhongwei Shen; Haitao Fan; Y. T. Li; L. M. Chen; X. Lu; Juan Ma; W. M. Wang; Z. H. Wang; Zuo Wei; Jie Zhang

In typical laser-driven proton acceleration experiments Thomson parabola proton spectrometers are used to measure the proton spectra with very small acceptance angle in specific directions. Stacks composed of CR-39 nuclear track detectors, imaging plates, or radiochromic films are used to measure the angular distributions of the proton beams, respectively. In this paper, a new proton spectrometer, which can measure the spectra and angular distributions simultaneously, has been designed. Proton acceleration experiments performed on the Xtreme light III laser system demonstrates that the spectrometer can give angle-resolved spectra with a large acceptance angle. This will be conductive to revealing the acceleration mechanisms, optimization, and applications of laser-driven proton beams.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Probing the laser wakefield in underdense plasmas by induced terahertz emission

Z. D. Hu; Z. M. Sheng; W. M. Wang; L. M. Chen; Y. T. Li; Jie Zhang

Terahertz (THz) radiation can be produced from a laser wakefield driven in underdense plasmas in the presence of a transverse DC magnetic field. It is shown that the radiation usually contains a component at the electron plasma frequency and its harmonics when the wakefield is excited at high amplitudes. In the highly nonlinear bubble/blowout regime, the radiation contains a smooth component peaked at the reduced electron plasma frequency and an irregular spectrum extending to tens of the electron plasma frequency. The latter is due to the broken-wave structure behind the bubble. A theoretical model is presented and validated via two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations. The measurement of such THz emission may provide a diagnostic of the laser wakefield structure.


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Experimental verification of the capillary plasma triggered long spark gap under the extremely low working coefficient in air

Dong Huang; Lanjun Yang; Peng Huo; J. B. Ma; Shuai Liu; W. M. Wang; W. D. Ding; G. Li; S. L. Yao

The paper has proposed a new triggering method for long spark gap based on capillary plasma ejection and conducted the experimental verification under the extremely low working coefficient, which represents that the ratio of the spark gap charging voltage to the breakdown voltage is particularly low. The quasi-neutral plasma is ejected from the capillary and develops through the axial direction of the spark gap. The electric field in the spark gap is thus changed and its breakdown is incurred. It is proved by the experiments that the capillary plasma ejection is effective in triggering the long spark gap under the extremely low working coefficient in air. The study also indicates that the breakdown probabilities, the breakdown delay, and the delay dispersion are all mainly determined by the characteristics of the ejected plasma, including the length of the plasma flow, the speed of the plasma ejection, and the ionization degree of the plasma. Moreover, the breakdown delay and the delay dispersion increase with the length of the long spark gap, and the polarity effect exists in the triggering process. Lastly, compared with the working patterns of the triggering device installed in the single electrode, the working pattern of the devices installed in both the two electrodes, though with the same breakdown process, achieves the ignition under longer gap distance. To be specific, at the gap length of 14u2009cm and the working coefficient of less than 2%, the spark gap is still ignited accurately.


Physical Review E | 2017

Laser opacity in underdense preplasma of solid targets due to quantum electrodynamics effects

W. M. Wang; Paul Gibbon; Zheng-Ming Sheng; Y. T. Li; Jie Zhang

We investigate how next-generation laser pulses at 10-200PW interact with a solid target in the presence of a relativistically underdense preplasma produced by amplified spontaneous emission (ASE). Laser hole boring and relativistic transparency are strongly restrained due to the generation of electron-positron pairs and γ-ray photons via quantum electrodynamics (QED) processes. A pair plasma with a density above the initial preplasma density is formed, counteracting the electron-free channel produced by hole boring. This pair-dominated plasma can block laser transport and trigger an avalanchelike QED cascade, efficiently transferring the laser energy to the photons. This renders a 1-μm scale-length, underdense preplasma completely opaque to laser pulses at this power level. The QED-induced opacity therefore sets much higher contrast requirements for such a pulse in solid-target experiments than expected by classical plasma physics. Our simulations show, for example, that proton acceleration from the rear of a solid with a preplasma would be strongly impaired.


Optics Express | 2014

Generation of quasi-monoenergetic electron beams with small normalized divergences angle from a 2 TW laser facility

Dazhang Li; W. C. Yan; L. M. Chen; Kai Huang; Y. Y. Ma; Zhao; L. Zhang; Nasr A. M. Hafz; W. M. Wang; Juan Ma; Y. T. Li; Zuo Wei; Jian Gao; Z. M. Sheng; Jie Zhang

We report the generation of a 6 pC, 23 MeV electron bunch with the energy spread ± 3.5% by using 2 TW, 80 fs high contrast laser pulses interacting with helium gas targets. Within the optimized experimental condition, we obtained quasi-monoenergetic electron beam with an ultra-small normalized divergence angle of 92 mrad, which is at least 5 times smaller than the previous LPA-produced bunches. We suggest the significant decrease of the normalized divergence angles is due to smooth transfer from SM-LWFA to LWFA. Since the beam size in LPA is typically small, this observation may explore a simple way to generate ultralow normalized emittance electron bunches by using small-power but high-repetition-rate laser facilities.

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Jie Zhang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Y. T. Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Z. M. Sheng

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Juan Ma

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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L. M. Chen

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

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Zuo Wei

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Min Chen

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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X. Lu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xing Gao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zheng-Ming Sheng

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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