
- Matter and Radiation at Extremes
- Vol. 6, Issue 6, 065903 (2021)
Abstract
I. INTRODUCTION
In inertial confinement fusion (ICF), owing to the limited energy of a single laser beam, a large number of beams are needed to deliver the megajoule laser energy to the target required for both indirect-drive and direct-drive schemes.1–3 The ubiquitous overlapping of laser beams leads to complex multibeam laser–plasma interaction (LPI) instabilities, including crossed-beam energy transfer (CBET) between different beams,4–8 seeded multibeam instability due to seeds generated elsewhere in the plasma1 and by glint,9 and collective instability with shared daughter waves.3,10,11 Among the various LPI instabilities in ICF, stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) and stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) instabilities are of primary concern, since they can scatter significant amounts of light, leading to a great energy loss from the incident lasers as well as degradation of the irradiation symmetry.12–17 The collective modes with common daughter waves deserve particular attention owing to their great temporal growth rate and convective gain, which scale up with the number of pump beams.18–20 Experimentally, collective SRS and SBS result in significant scattered light losses in novel directions,19–21 which can be located far from the apertures of the beams where diagnostics are usually set up12,22 and are hence quite hard to detect. Understanding these processes is essential for better identifying, modeling, and diagnosing multibeam SRS or SBS processes and is helpful to optimize ICF implosions.
The collective SRS or SBS processes include shared plasma (SP) wave modes and shared light (SL) wave modes, depending on whether the shared daughter wave is a common Langmuir/ion acoustic wave or a common scattered wave. Previous theoretical studies of the homogeneous temporal growth rate for collective SP and SL modes of multiple beams have been conducted using a fluid description.23–25 In addition, some two-dimensional (2D) particle-in-cell simulations have verified the importance of in-plane collective SRS modes of two overlapped beams,25,26 where the wavevectors of daughter waves lie in the plane of incidence of two overlapped beams. The SP modes of collective SBS in the spatial convective regime, which is typical of practical ICF conditions,27–29 have recently been studied, and it has been found that the out-of-plane modes can be quite important for some polarization states of the laser beams.30 In the present work, the SL modes of collective SBS in the convective regime are studied, and the impacts of the crossing angle, polarization states, and finite beam overlapping volume of the two laser beams on SL modes of SBS are investigated systematically for both zero and nonzero wavelength differences between the two pump beams. Compared with the SP modes, the SL modes are found to be much more sensitive to the polarization states and wavelength difference. Nevertheless, the out-of-plane modes can still be quite important for some polarization states and beam crossing angles. The results of this work should be helpful in comprehending and estimating the importance of collective SBS with shared scattered wave in ICF experiments.
The remainder of the paper is organized as follows. In Sec. II, the theoretical model for SL modes is presented, where an analytic solution for the convective gain coefficient is given. In Sec. III, the impacts of the crossing angle, polarization states, and finite beam overlapping volume of the two laser beams on the scattered wavelength and spatial amplification of the collective SBS modes with shared scattered wave are investigated for both zero and nonzero wavelength differences between the pump lasers, and the importance of out-of-plane modes relative to in-plane modes is discussed. In Sec. IV, the conclusions are given, together with some discussions.
II. THEORETICAL MODEL FOR SL MODES OF TWO CROSSING BEAMS
The SL modes of two crossing beams incorporate five coupled waves: the two pump light waves and one common scattered light wave, as well as two plasma waves corresponding to the coupling between each pump light and the common scattered light. The phase matching conditions can be written as
Figure 1.(a) Geometry of collective SL modes for two overlapped beams. (For generality, a nonzero wavelength difference of these two beams is assumed.) In the presented coordinate system, the
For most practical cases in ICF, both SRS and SBS are spatial problems,27,31,32 for which the convective amplification properties are of great importance. To study the convective amplification of the SL modes, the envelope approximation for the five coupled waves can be adopted. In the strong-damping regime, the equations for the complex vector amplitudes of the laser beams (
As illustrated in Fig. 1(b), the projections of the polarization directions
III. COLLECTIVE SBS MODES WITH SHARED SCATTERED WAVE FOR TWO OVERLAPPED BEAMS
In this section, we investigate the impacts of crossing angle, polarization states, and the finite overlapping volume of the two laser beams on collective SBS modes with shared scattered wave for both zero and nonzero wavelength differences between the two pump beams.
Assuming zero flow velocity, the ion acoustic waves satisfy the dispersion relation
A. SL modes for two beams with the same wavelength
For the SL modes of collective SBS, since
For a typical plasma condition at the laser entrance hole of a He plasma,36
Figure 2.
The influence of polarization on κc of the SL modes can be evaluated through
Figure 3.Upper and lower bounds of
To see the relative importance of SL modes with different out-of-plane angles for specified polarization states, we consider the relation between
For other combinations of β1 and β2, the typical variation of
Figure 4.
In practice, the overlapping volume of the laser beam is finite, limiting the amplification length lamp (along the
Figure 5.Achievable
B. SL modes for two beams with nonzero wavelength difference
For two beams with nonzero wavelength difference, on substituting the expression (3) for
Figure 6.Possible directions of
The
Figure 7.
Taking into account the effects of the polarization states and the finite beam overlapping volume of the two laser beams, the achievable κclamp/wb can be calculated for an arbitrary allowed Δλ0, similar to the case for Δλ0 = 0. Combining the results for different Δλ0 and taking the value of κc at the peak wavelength, a map of κclamp/wb vs the direction of
Figure 8.Maps of
IV. DISCUSSION AND SUMMARY
In summary, based on a linear kinetic model, an analytic convective solution has been derived for the SL modes of two overlapped laser beams. The effects of crossing angle, polarization states, and the finite overlapping volume of the two beams on the collective SBS modes with shared scattered waves have been discussed in detail for both zero and nonzero wavelength differences between the two laser beams. When the two beams are of the same wavelength, the wavevectors of the shared scattered waves lie on a circle in the bisecting plane between the wavevectors of the two laser beams. The wavelength of the scattered waves varies with the beam crossing angle and the out-of-plane angle of the SL modes. The gain coefficients of the SL modes, on the other hand, are also subject to the polarization states of the laser beams. When the two laser beams are both s-polarized, the gain coefficient of the SL mode is twice the gain coefficient of a single beam, while when the polarization directions of the two beams are orthogonal to each other, the gain coefficient of the collective SBS modes becomes the same as the single-beam side-scatter with the same scattering angle. Furthermore, for some polarization states and especially for obtuse crossing angles, the out-of-plane SL modes can become more important than the in-plane modes. With increasing wavelength difference between the two laser beams, the possible directions of the wavevectors of the common scattered wave contract toward the wavevector direction of the pump beam with longer wavelength. This changes the scattered wavelengths and the gain coefficients of the SL modes. Nevertheless, depending on the polarization state and the beam crossing angle, the out-of-plane modes can still be quite important. Finally, for sufficiently large vacuum wavelength difference
In this work, uniform plasma conditions with zero flow velocity have been assumed for an illustrative analysis. A nonzero flow velocity effectively leads to an additional wavelength difference between the two laser beams, which can also be accounted for by our model. Furthermore, in ICF, various laser smoothing techniques, such as kinoform/random phase plate (KPP/RPP),37 smoothing by spectral dispersion (SSD),38 polarization smoothing (PS),39 and some new methods,40–42 are often used to suppress LPI. Consequently, the laser beam intensity distribution can be highly nonuniform with many high-intensity speckles, and the induced temporal/spatial incoherence of the laser beam introduces additional mismatching into SBS, leading to a modified ponderomotive response γpm.43 To obtain a precise gain by integrating the local gain coefficient, these two factors, along with the realistic overlapping pattern of the laser beams,20,32 should be properly taken into account in further simulations. The collective SL modes can have much higher gain coefficient than single-beam SBS, and consequently they can be amplified to a great magnitude over a short distance. Especially for practical inhomogeneous plasmas, when the resonance length is limited by the inhomogeneity of the flow velocity or temperature,5,32 the collective SL mode could dominate over the single-beam SBS mode. Finally, from a comparison with the collective SP modes investigated in Ref. 30, it is found that depending on the crossing angle, polarization states, and the wavelength difference between the two laser beams, either the SP or the SL mode can be more important. Simulations under realistic plasma and laser conditions are required to assess the importance of the SL modes, for which this work provides valuable theoretical references.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Acknowledgment. This work was supported by the National Key R&D Program of China (Grant No. 2017YFA0403204), the Science Challenge Project (Grant No. TZ2016005), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 11 875 093 and 11 875 091), and the Project supported by CAEP Foundation (Grant No. CX20210040).
APPENDIX A: ACHIEVABLE RANGE OF κc/κcU AT EACH φs BY ADJUSTING β1 AND β2 FOR TWO CROSSING BEAMS WITH SAME WAVELENGTH AND INTENSITY
By analysis, it is found that both the upper and lower bounds of
APPENDIX B: MAXIMUM VALUE OF κc/κcU VS φs FOR TWO CROSSING BEAMS WITH SAME WAVELENGTH AND INTENSITY WHEN THEIR POLARIZATION STATES ARE GIVEN
In this case, the polarization direction of beam
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[44] In discussions for zero laser wavelength difference, 90° ≥ φs ≥ −90° for θs = 0° or θs = 180° is adopted to denote different SL modes. For θs = 0, α⊥ = arctan(tan φs/sin θh), while for θs = 180°, α⊥ = 180 − arctan(tan φs/sin θh). Thus, for Δλ0 = 0, α⊥ = 0 corresponds to “forward” in-plane scattering (θs = 0 and φs = 0), α⊥ = 180° corresponds to “backward” in-plane scattering (θs = 180° and φs = 0°), and α⊥ = 90° corresponds to scattering with the largest out-of-plane angle (φs = 90°).

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