A newly published theoretical and computer modeling study suggests that the
world's most powerful lasers might finally crack the elusive physics behind
some of the most extreme phenomena in the universe—gamma ray bursts, pulsar
magnetospheres, and more.
The international research team behind the study includes researchers from
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and France's
Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA-LIDYL). They report
their findings in the prestigious journal Physical Review Letters.
The research team was led by CEA's Henri Vincenti, who proposed the main
physical concept. Jean-Luc Vay and Andrew Myers, of Berkeley Lab's
Accelerator Technology and Applied Physics (ATAP) Division and Computational
Research Division, respectively, led development of the simulation code used
for the research. (Vincenti previously worked at Berkeley Lab as a Marie
Curie Research Fellow and remains an ATAP affiliate and frequent
collaborator.) The theoretical and numerical work was led by Luca Fedeli
from Vincenti's team at CEA.
The team's modeling study shows that petawatt (PW)-class lasers—juiced to
even higher intensities via light-matter interactions—might provide a key to
unlock the mysteries of the strong-field (SF) regime of quantum
electrodynamics (QED). A petawatt is 1 times ten to the fifteenth power
(that is, followed by 15 zeroes), or a quadrillion watts. The output of
today's most powerful lasers is measured in petawatts.
"This is a powerful demonstration of how advanced simulation of complex
systems can enable new paths for discovery science by integrating multiple
physics processes—in this case, the laser interaction with a target and
subsequent production of particles in a second target," said ATAP Division
Director Cameron Geddes.
Lasers probe some of nature's most jealously guarded secrets
While QED is a cornerstone of modern physics that has withstood the rigor of
experiment over many decades, probing SF-QED requires electromagnetic fields
of an intensity many orders of magnitude beyond those normally available on
Earth.
Researchers have tried side routes to SF-QED, such as using powerful
particle beams from accelerators to observe particle interactions with the
strong fields that are naturally present in some aligned crystals.
For a more direct approach, the highest electromagnetic fields available in
a laboratory are delivered by PW-class lasers. A 10-PW laser (the world's
most powerful at this time), focused down to a few microns, can reach
intensities close to 1023 watts per square centimeter. The associated
electric field values can be as high as 1014 volts per meter. Yet studying
SF-QED requires even higher field amplitudes than that—orders of magnitude
beyond what can be achieved with those lasers.
To break this barrier, researchers have planned to call on powerful electron
beams, accessible at large accelerator or laser facilities. When a
high-power laser pulse collides with a relativistic electron beam, the laser
field amplitude seen by electrons in their rest frame can be increased by
orders of magnitude, giving access to new SF-QED regimes.
Though such methods are challenging experimentally, as they call for the
synchronization in space and time of a high-power laser pulse and a
relativistic electron beam at femtosecond and micron scales, a few such
experiments have been successfully conducted, and several more are planned
around the world at PW-class laser facilities.
Using a moving, curved plasma mirror for a direct look
The research team proposed a complementary method: a compact scheme that can
directly boost the intensity of existing high-power laser beams. It is based
on a well-known concept of light intensification and on their theoretical
and computer modeling studies.
The scheme consists of boosting the intensity of a PW laser pulse with a
relativistic plasma mirror. Such a mirror can be formed when an ultrahigh
intensity laser beam hits an optically polished solid target. Due to the
high laser amplitude, the solid target is fully ionized, forming a dense
plasma that reflects the incident light. At the same time the reflecting
surface is actually moved by the intense laser field. As a result of that
motion, part of the reflected laser pulse is temporally compressed and
converted to a shorter wavelength by the Doppler effect.
Radiation pressure from the laser gives this plasma mirror a natural
curvature. This focuses the Doppler-boosted beam to much smaller spots,
which can lead to extreme intensity gains—more than three orders of
magnitude—where the Doppler-boosted laser beam is focused. The simulations
indicate that a secondary target at this focus would give clear SF-QED
signatures in actual experiments.
Berkeley Lab integral to international team-science effort
The study drew upon Berkeley Lab's diverse scientific resources, including
its WarpX simulation code, which was developed for modeling advanced
particle accelerators under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy's
Exascale Computing Project. The novel capabilities of WarpX allowed the
modeling of the intensity boost and the interaction of the boosted pulse
with the target. All previous simulation studies had only been able to
explore proof-of-principle configurations.
Experimental verification of the research team's methodology for probing
SF-QED might come from the Berkeley Lab Laser Accelerator (BELLA), a
petawatt-class laser with a repetition rate, unprecedented at that power, of
a pulse per second. Now under construction is a second beamline that might
also contribute to experimental studies of SF-QED by Berkeley Lab
researchers. A proposed new laser, kBELLA, could enable future high rate
studies by bringing high intensity at a kilohertz repetition rate to the
facility.
The discovery via WarpX of novel high-intensity laser-plasma interaction
regimes could have benefits far beyond ideas for exploring SF-QED. These
include the better understanding and design of plasma-based accelerators
such as those being developed at BELLA. More compact and less expensive than
conventional accelerators of similar energy, they could eventually be
game-changers in applications that range from extending the reach of
high-energy physics and of penetrating photon sources for precision imaging,
to implanting ions in semiconductors, treating cancer, developing new
pharmaceuticals, and more.
"It is gratifying to be able to contribute to the validation of new,
potentially very impactful ideas via the use of our novel algorithms and
codes," Vay said of the Berkeley Lab team's contributions to the study.
"This is part of the beauty of collaborative team science."
Reference:
L. Fedeli et al, Probing Strong-Field QED with Doppler-Boosted
Petawatt-Class Lasers, Physical Review Letters (2021).
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.114801
Tags:
Physics