Shock waves generated by intense femtosecond lasers
The advent of intense femtosecond lasers has created the exciting possibility of accessing regimes of extreme high pressure using a relatively small laser system. This stems from the lack of significant hydrodynamic expansion during the process of laser deposition in a solid via skin-depth absorp...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-105182018-01-05T17:35:20Z Shock waves generated by intense femtosecond lasers Ao, Tommy The advent of intense femtosecond lasers has created the exciting possibility of accessing regimes of extreme high pressure using a relatively small laser system. This stems from the lack of significant hydrodynamic expansion during the process of laser deposition in a solid via skin-depth absorption, which leads to extremely high energy densities in the irradiated sample. After the short-pulse laser energy has been absorbed, the laser-heated material begins to be released which drives a shock wave into the sample. However, unlike previous long-pulse laser driven shock waves, the shock wave driven by a intense short-pulse laser rapidly decays as it propagates through the sample. Before adopting such a shock wave as a new approach in the study of high density plasmas, its unique characteristics must be understood. A one-dimensional hydrodynamic code which is coupled to an electromagnetic wave solver is used to elucidate the basic properties of shock waves generated by intense femtosecond lasers. Using a unique experimental scheme, the electrical conductivity of silicon in the dense, plasma state can also be studied. Calculations were performed in which a shock wave was driven. into a silcion sample by a pump laser with a wavelength of 400 nm, pulse length of 120 fs (FWHM) and irradiances ranging from 10¹⁴ — 10¹⁵W/cm², while rear-side optical measurements were made by a 800 nm, 120 fs probe laser. Science, Faculty of Physics and Astronomy, Department of Graduate 2009-07-09T20:16:26Z 2009-07-09T20:16:26Z 2000 2000-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/10518 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 4306598 bytes application/pdf |
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English |
format |
Others
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NDLTD |
description |
The advent of intense femtosecond lasers has created the exciting possibility of accessing
regimes of extreme high pressure using a relatively small laser system. This
stems from the lack of significant hydrodynamic expansion during the process of laser
deposition in a solid via skin-depth absorption, which leads to extremely high energy
densities in the irradiated sample. After the short-pulse laser energy has been absorbed,
the laser-heated material begins to be released which drives a shock wave into the sample.
However, unlike previous long-pulse laser driven shock waves, the shock wave driven by
a intense short-pulse laser rapidly decays as it propagates through the sample. Before
adopting such a shock wave as a new approach in the study of high density plasmas, its
unique characteristics must be understood.
A one-dimensional hydrodynamic code which is coupled to an electromagnetic wave
solver is used to elucidate the basic properties of shock waves generated by intense femtosecond
lasers. Using a unique experimental scheme, the electrical conductivity of silicon
in the dense, plasma state can also be studied. Calculations were performed in which a
shock wave was driven. into a silcion sample by a pump laser with a wavelength of 400
nm, pulse length of 120 fs (FWHM) and irradiances ranging from 10¹⁴ — 10¹⁵W/cm²,
while rear-side optical measurements were made by a 800 nm, 120 fs probe laser. === Science, Faculty of === Physics and Astronomy, Department of === Graduate |
author |
Ao, Tommy |
spellingShingle |
Ao, Tommy Shock waves generated by intense femtosecond lasers |
author_facet |
Ao, Tommy |
author_sort |
Ao, Tommy |
title |
Shock waves generated by intense femtosecond lasers |
title_short |
Shock waves generated by intense femtosecond lasers |
title_full |
Shock waves generated by intense femtosecond lasers |
title_fullStr |
Shock waves generated by intense femtosecond lasers |
title_full_unstemmed |
Shock waves generated by intense femtosecond lasers |
title_sort |
shock waves generated by intense femtosecond lasers |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/10518 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT aotommy shockwavesgeneratedbyintensefemtosecondlasers |
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1718588576775536640 |