Albertazzi B, d'Humières E, Lancia L, Dervieux V, Antici P, Böcker J, Bonlie J, Breil J, Cauble B, Chen S N, Feugeas J L, Nakatsutsumi M, Nicolaï P, Romagnani L, Shepherd R, Sentoku Y, Swantusch M, Tikhonchuk V T, Borghesi M, Willi O, Pépin H, Fuchs J
LULI, École Polytechnique, CNRS, CEA, UPMC, 91128 Palaiseau, France.
CELIA, Universite de Bordeaux, Talence 33405, France.
Rev Sci Instrum. 2015 Apr;86(4):043502. doi: 10.1063/1.4917273.
Ultra-intense lasers can nowadays routinely accelerate kiloampere ion beams. These unique sources of particle beams could impact many societal (e.g., proton-therapy or fuel recycling) and fundamental (e.g., neutron probing) domains. However, this requires overcoming the beam angular divergence at the source. This has been attempted, either with large-scale conventional setups or with compact plasma techniques that however have the restriction of short (<1 mm) focusing distances or a chromatic behavior. Here, we show that exploiting laser-triggered, long-lasting (>50 ps), thermoelectric multi-megagauss surface magnetic (B)-fields, compact capturing, and focusing of a diverging laser-driven multi-MeV ion beam can be achieved over a wide range of ion energies in the limit of a 5° acceptance angle.