Short pulse laser propagation in underdense plasmas

1996; American Physical Society; Volume: 53; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1103/physreve.53.1068

ISSN

1538-4519

Autores

Michael D. Feit, J. C. Garrison, A. M. Rubenchik,

Tópico(s)

Laser-Matter Interactions and Applications

Resumo

Propagation of an intense laser pulse in an underdense plasma is modeled by treating the electrons as a cold relativistic fluid. For sufficiently short pulses, the ion motion is negligible. The disparities between the optical, plasma, and propagation length scales are dealt with by using a multiple scales technique to derive approximate equations averaged over successively larger length scales. This argument does not require the quasistatic approximation (QSA) often used in earlier works, and it shows that, in the coordinate system moving with the pulse, the fluid will exhibit transient temporal oscillations. Asymptotically, i.e., for times that are long on the plasma scale, the transient solution approaches the QSA. The problem of matching the transient (inner) solution to the asymptotic (outer) solution is solved by means of a uniformly valid, two-time expansion. The QSA is shown to suffer from instabilities, which could cause serious problems for numerical simulations of long pulses, and an ``improved-QSA,'' suggested by the inner-outer analysis, is demonstrated. An analytical solution for a planar, weak-field model is presented that explicitly displays the transient behavior of the fluid. For a short, cylindrically symmetric, weak-field pulse, numerical simulations that include relativistic self-focusing, forward Raman scattering, and ponderomotive forces show the importance of the transient effects in a more realistic case. \textcopyright{} 1996 The American Physical Society.

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