Gigavolt bound-free transitions driven by extreme light
Daniel F. Gordon, John P. Palastro, Bahman Hafizi

TL;DR
This paper explores ultra-relativistic tunneling ionization driven by extreme light, revealing how wave-particle resonance and finite spot-size effects influence photoelectron spectra and enabling the generation of gigavolt photoelectrons with controlled properties.
Contribution
It introduces a new understanding of ionization dynamics in ultra-relativistic regimes and presents an advanced numerical particle tracking method for these scenarios.
Findings
Photoelectron spectra are strongly affected by wave-particle resonance.
Target and collection geometry can produce low emittance, low energy spread gigavolt photoelectrons.
Radiation reaction effects are negligible at near-term laser intensities but become relevant at multi-exawatt levels.
Abstract
The photoelectron spectrum in the ultra-relativistic limit of tunneling ionization is strongly affected by wave-particle resonance and finite spot-size effects, in contradistinction with the usual assumptions of strong field physics. Near term laser facilities will access a regime where ionized electrons are abruptly accelerated in the laser propagation direction, such that they stay in phase with the laser fields through a substantial portion of the confocal region. The final momentum of the electron depends significantly on where in the confocal region it originated. By manipulating the target and collection geometry, it is possible to obtain low emittance, low energy spread, gigavolt photoelectrons. Radiation reaction effects play a negligible role in near term scenarios, but become interesting in the multi-exawatt regime. A significant advance in numerical particle tracking is…
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