Paper
10 April 1995 Trident as an ultrahigh irradiance laser
Randall P. Johnson, N. Kent Moncur, James A. Cobble, Robert G. Watt, Robert B. Gibson
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Abstract
The Trident Nd:glass ICF laser at Los Alamos National Lab may be operated in a mode that produces high energy ultrashort pulses by the chirp/compression method. The 125-ps pulses from a standard mode-locked, Nd:YLF oscillator are first frequency-broadened to 3-nm bandwidth, chirped in a quartz fiber, and then compressed with a grating pair to 1.5 ps. A second quartz fiber then provides nonlinear polarization rotation for background and satellite suppression and to further broaden the spectrum to 4.5 nm. Pulses are chirped again to 500 ps width with a second grating pair and amplified in a Ti:sapphire regenerative amplifier pumped by frequency-doubled Nd:YAG. Millijoule-level output is then amplified through the existing phosphate glass Trident amplifier chain before compression to < 400 fs. Energy up to 1.5 J with excellent beam quality and contrast ratio is routinely produced by compressing after three rod amplifier stages. Higher energies are possible by compression further along the amplifier chain. Simultaneous use of long (approximately 1 ns) pulses for plasma formation is also possible.
© (1995) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Randall P. Johnson, N. Kent Moncur, James A. Cobble, Robert G. Watt, and Robert B. Gibson "Trident as an ultrahigh irradiance laser", Proc. SPIE 2377, Generation, Amplification, and Measurement of Ultrashort Laser Pulses II, (10 April 1995); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.206416
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KEYWORDS
Amplifiers

Crystals

Picosecond phenomena

Pulsed laser operation

Optical amplifiers

X-rays

Laser crystals

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