Paper
14 September 1977 Ultraviolet Probing Of Laser-Produced Plasmas With Picosecond Pulses
D. T. Attwood
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 0097, 12th Intl Congress on High Speed Photography; (1977) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.955253
Event: 12th International Congress on High Speed Photography, 1976, Toronto, Canada
Abstract
Technical photography, through such means as interferometry, Faraday rotation, and simple shadowgraphs, can provide significant data for understanding the absorption and transport of energy within laser produced plasmas. For plasmas produced by intepip, sub-vanosecond Nd laser pulses, one is required to study electron densities in the 10" to 1021 e/cc range, with density contour velocities of 106 to l0 cm/sec, and axial scale lengths of 1-20 μm. In this paper we describe the relationship between these plasma parameters and the requisite photographic system. We conclude that the system requires a probe wavelength in the middle ultraviolet, a pulse duration in the 10-100 picosecond regime, and large numerical aperture optics corrected for spherical aberrations. Results obtained at 2660 Å with holographic microinterferometry, Faraday rotation, and shadowgraphs are presented.
© (1977) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
D. T. Attwood "Ultraviolet Probing Of Laser-Produced Plasmas With Picosecond Pulses", Proc. SPIE 0097, 12th Intl Congress on High Speed Photography, (14 September 1977); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.955253
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KEYWORDS
Plasmas

Picosecond phenomena

Magnetism

Polarization

Ultraviolet radiation

Interferometry

High speed photography

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