RESUMO
We develop a pulsed hard x-ray Kα source at 17.4 keV produced by the interaction of a multi-terawatt peak power infrared femtosecond laser pulse with a thick molybdenum (Mo) target at a 100 Hz repetition rate. We measure the highest Mo Kα photon production reported to date corresponding to a Kα photon flux of 1×1011 ph/(sr·s) and an estimated peak brightness of â¼2.5×1017 ph/(s·mm2·mrad2(0.1% bandwidth)) at â¼5×1018 W/cm2 driving laser intensity.
RESUMO
We present an extended experimental study of the absolute yield of Kα x-ray source (17.48 keV) produced by interaction of an ultrahigh intensity femtosecond laser with solid Mo target for temporal contrast ratios in the range of 1.7 × 107-3.3 × 109 and on three decades of intensity 1016-1019 W/cm². We demonstrate that for intensity I ≥ 2 × 1018 W/cm² Kα x-ray emission is independent of the value of contrast ratio. In addition, no saturation of the Kα photon number is measured and a value of ~2 × 1010 photons/sr/s is obtained at 10 Hz and I ~1019 W/cm². Furthermore, Kα energy conversion efficiency reaches the same high plateau equal to ~2 × 10-4 at I = 1019 W/cm² for all the studied contrast ratios. This original result suggests that relativistic J × B heating becomes dominant in these operating conditions which is supposed to be insensitive to the electron density gradient scale length L/λ. Finally, an additional experimental study performed by changing the angle of incidence of the laser beam onto the solid target highlights a clear signature of the interplay between collisionless absorption mechanisms depending on the contrast ratio and intensity.