Burst intensification by singularity emitting radiation in multi-stream flows
A. S. Pirozhkov, T. Zh. Esirkepov, T. A. Pikuz, A. Ya. Faenov, K., Ogura, Y. Hayashi, H. Kotaki, E. N. Ragozin, D. Neely, H. Kiriyama, J. K., Koga, Y. Fukuda, A. Sagisaka, M. Nishikino, T. Imazono, N. Hasegawa, T., Kawachi, P. R. Bolton, H. Daido, Y. Kato, K. Kondo

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that relativistic plasma density singularities can emit intense, coherent soft x-ray radiation, revealing a new mechanism for generating bright, ultrashort x-ray sources and potential gravitational wave enhancement.
Contribution
The study introduces the concept of burst intensification by singularity emission in multi-stream flows, supported by experiments and simulations in laser-driven relativistic plasma.
Findings
Bright coherent soft x-ray radiation from plasma singularities
Experimental and simulation validation of the phenomenon
Potential applications in x-ray sources and gravitational wave generation
Abstract
In various media the elementary components can emit traveling waves such as electromagnetic, gravitational or acoustic types. If these elementary emitters are synchronized, the resulting emission is coherent. Moreover, the faster the emitters approach an observer, the more intense and directional their apparent emission is, with associated frequency increase. Multi-stream flows ubiquitously occur in media (such as with shock waves and jets in astrophysical and laboratory plasmas) and produce fast moving density singularities, where high concentration and synchronism can bring constructive interference. However, a singularity emitting such characteristic coherent radiation has not been demonstrated yet. We show this general phenomenon in laser-driven relativistic plasma, which is an ideal medium for realizing these effects in the laboratory under controllable conditions. Our experiments…
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