Compressed Ultrafast Photography of Plasmas Formed from Laser Breakdown of Dense Gases Reveals that Internal Processes Dominate Evolution at Early Times
Compressed Ultrafast Photography of Plasmas Formed from Laser Breakdown of Dense Gases Reveals that Internal Processes Dominate Evolution at Early Times
Compressed ultrafast photography (CUP) is applied to laser breakdown in argon and xenon under pressures up to 40atm to obtain 2D images of the plasma dynamics of single events with a spatial resolution of 250x100 pixels and an equivalent frame rate of 500 GHz. Light emission as a function of position and time is measured through red, green, blue, and broad-band filters. The spatially encoded and temporally sheared image normally used in CUP is now enhanced by the introduction of a constraint given by a spatially integrated and temporally sheared unencoded signal. The data yield insights into the temperature, opacity, the plasma formation process, and heat flow within the plasma and to the surrounding ambient gas. Contours of constant emission indicate that plasmas formed from sufficiently dense gas contract rather than expand despite having a temperature of a few eV. Plasmas formed from relatively low pressure gases such as 7atm argon can radiate with emissivity near unity. Modeling transport and opacity as arising from inverse Bremsstrahlung requires a degree of ionization that strongly exceeds expectations based on Saha's equation even as customarily modified to include density and screening. According to this model, both electrons and ions are strongly coupled with a plasma coefficient >1. During the first few nanoseconds after formation, Stefan-Boltzmann radiation and thermal conduction to ambient gas are too weak to explain the observed cooling rates, suggesting that transport within the plasma dominates its evolution. Yet, thermal conduction within the plasma itself is also small as indicated by the persistence of thermal inhomogeneities for far longer timescales. The fact that plasma is isolated from the surroundings makes it an excellent system for the study of the equation of state and hydrodynamics of such dense plasmas via the systems and techniques described.
Peng Wang、Yogeshwar Nath Mishra、Seth Pree、Lihong V. Wang、Dag Hanstorp、John P. Koulakis、Daniels Krimans、Seth Putterman
物理学
Peng Wang,Yogeshwar Nath Mishra,Seth Pree,Lihong V. Wang,Dag Hanstorp,John P. Koulakis,Daniels Krimans,Seth Putterman.Compressed Ultrafast Photography of Plasmas Formed from Laser Breakdown of Dense Gases Reveals that Internal Processes Dominate Evolution at Early Times[EB/OL].(2025-07-07)[2025-07-21].https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.04608.点此复制
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