Collisionless absorption, hot electron generation, and energy scaling in intense laser-target interaction
T. Liseykina, P. Mulser, M. Murakami

TL;DR
This paper investigates the physics of collisionless laser absorption in plasma, revealing how hot electrons are generated and scaled with intensity, with emphasis on the Brunel model and the role of anharmonic resonance.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of collisionless absorption mechanisms, hot electron generation, and energy scaling, highlighting the significance of anharmonic resonance and the transition to relativistic regimes.
Findings
Hot electron distribution resembles Brunel's model at relativistic threshold
Absorption minima occur at specific laser intensities and densities
Hot electron energy scales strongly with laser intensity, especially beyond 3.5×10^{21} W/cm^2μm^2
Abstract
Among the various attempts to understand collisionless absorption of intense ultrashort laser pulses a variety of models has been invented to describe the laser beam target interaction. In terms of basic physics collisionless absorption is understood now as the interplay of the oscillating laser field with the space charge field produced in the plasma. A first approach to this idea is realized in Brunel's model the essence of which consists in the formation of an oscillating charge cloud in the vacuum in front of the target. The investigation of statistical ensembles of orbits shows that the absorption process is localized at the ion-vacuum interface and in the skin layer: Single electrons enter into resonance with the laser field thereby undergoing a phase shift which causes orbit crossing and braking of Brunel's laminar flow. This anharmonic resonance acts like an attractor for the…
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