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Hot electron emission limited by self-excited fields from targets irradiated by ultra-intense laser pulses
Yabuuchi, T.; Sentoku, Y.; Habara, H.; Matsuoka, T.; Adumi, K.; Chen, Z.; Kodama, R.; Kondo, K.; Lei, A. L.; Mima, K.; Tampo, M.; Tanimoto, T.; Tanaka, K. A.
2008
Citation:Yabuuchi, T; Sentoku, Y; Habara, H; Matsuoka, T; Adumi, K; Chen, Z; Kodama, R; Kondo, K; Lei, A L; Mima, K; Tampo, M; Tanimoto, T; Tanaka, K A (2008). "Hot electron emission limited by self-excited fields from targets irradiated by ultra-intense laser pulses." Journal of Physics: Conference Series 112(2):022093 (4pp). <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/64170>
Abstract: "A large number of hot electrons exceeding the Alfven current can be produced when an ultra-intense laser pulse irradiates a solid target. Self-excited electrostatic and magnetic fields at the target rear could influence the hot electron transport. To investigate the influence, we measure the hot electrons when a pre-plasma is created on the target rear surface and verify an increase of the electron number by a factor of 2 comparing to the no rear plasma case. The increase may be caused because of changes in the electrostatic potential formation process. The retardation of the potential formation is shown using a particle-in-cell simulation. The electron number escaping within the retardation time duration is consistent with our estimation taking the Alfven current into account."