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Superintense Laser-driven Photon Activation Analysis

Laser-driven radiation sources are attracting increasing attention for several materials science applications. While laser-driven ions, electrons and neutrons have already been considered to carry out the elemental characterization of materials, the possibility to exploit high energy photons remains...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mirani, F., Calzolari, D., Formenti, A., Passoni, M.
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42005-021-00685-2
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2764485
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author Mirani, F.
Calzolari, D.
Formenti, A.
Passoni, M.
author_facet Mirani, F.
Calzolari, D.
Formenti, A.
Passoni, M.
author_sort Mirani, F.
collection CERN
description Laser-driven radiation sources are attracting increasing attention for several materials science applications. While laser-driven ions, electrons and neutrons have already been considered to carry out the elemental characterization of materials, the possibility to exploit high energy photons remains unexplored. Indeed, the electrons generated by the interaction of an ultra-intense laser pulse with a near-critical material can be turned into high energy photons via bremsstrahlung emission when shot into a high-Z converter. These photons could be effectively exploited to perform Photon Activation Analysis (PAA). In the present work, the possibility to perform laser-driven PAA is proposed and investigated. By means of a theoretical and numerical approach, we identify the optimal near-critical material and converter parameters for laser-driven PAA in a wide range of laser intensities. Finally, exploiting the Monte Carlo and Particle-In-Cell tools, we simulate PAA experiments performed with both conventional accelerators and laser-driven sources.
id cern-2764485
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2021
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spelling cern-27644852023-01-31T08:10:52Zdoi:10.1038/s42005-021-00685-2http://cds.cern.ch/record/2764485engMirani, F.Calzolari, D.Formenti, A.Passoni, M.Superintense Laser-driven Photon Activation Analysisphysics.opticsOther Fields of Physicsphysics.plasm-phOther Fields of PhysicsLaser-driven radiation sources are attracting increasing attention for several materials science applications. While laser-driven ions, electrons and neutrons have already been considered to carry out the elemental characterization of materials, the possibility to exploit high energy photons remains unexplored. Indeed, the electrons generated by the interaction of an ultra-intense laser pulse with a near-critical material can be turned into high energy photons via bremsstrahlung emission when shot into a high-Z converter. These photons could be effectively exploited to perform Photon Activation Analysis (PAA). In the present work, the possibility to perform laser-driven PAA is proposed and investigated. By means of a theoretical and numerical approach, we identify the optimal near-critical material and converter parameters for laser-driven PAA in a wide range of laser intensities. Finally, exploiting the Monte Carlo and Particle-In-Cell tools, we simulate PAA experiments performed with both conventional accelerators and laser-driven sources.arXiv:2104.07513oai:cds.cern.ch:27644852021-04-15
spellingShingle physics.optics
Other Fields of Physics
physics.plasm-ph
Other Fields of Physics
Mirani, F.
Calzolari, D.
Formenti, A.
Passoni, M.
Superintense Laser-driven Photon Activation Analysis
title Superintense Laser-driven Photon Activation Analysis
title_full Superintense Laser-driven Photon Activation Analysis
title_fullStr Superintense Laser-driven Photon Activation Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Superintense Laser-driven Photon Activation Analysis
title_short Superintense Laser-driven Photon Activation Analysis
title_sort superintense laser-driven photon activation analysis
topic physics.optics
Other Fields of Physics
physics.plasm-ph
Other Fields of Physics
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42005-021-00685-2
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2764485
work_keys_str_mv AT miranif superintenselaserdrivenphotonactivationanalysis
AT calzolarid superintenselaserdrivenphotonactivationanalysis
AT formentia superintenselaserdrivenphotonactivationanalysis
AT passonim superintenselaserdrivenphotonactivationanalysis