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    Home»Physics»Towards Megatesla Magnetic Fields by Microtube Implosions
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    Towards Megatesla Magnetic Fields by Microtube Implosions

    By Osaka UniversityDecember 12, 2021No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Microtube Implosion
    Illustration of a microtube implosion. Due to the laser-produced hot electrons with megaelectron volt energies, cold ions in the inner wall surface implode toward the central axis. By pre-seeding uniform magnetic fields of the kilotesla order, the Lorentz force induces a Larmor gyromotion of the imploding ions and electrons. Due to the resultant collective motion of relativistic charged particles around the central axis, strong spin currents of approximately peta-ampere/cm^2 are produced with a few tens of nm size, generating megatesla-order magnetic fields. Credit: Masakatsu Murakami

    High-precision 3D supercomputer simulations reveal the 3D structure of theoretically predicted micron-scale megatesla magnetic fields, optimizing engineering design of laser conditions and micron-size target structures for future laser experiments.

    Megatesla Magnetic Fields
    Perspective views of the normalized ion density ni/ni0 and the z-component of the magnetic field Bz, respectively, observed at t~200 fs, which is obtained by a 3D EPOCH simulation. A cubic aluminum target with a size of 14 µm × 14 µm × 14 µm is set at the center, which has a cylindrical cavity with a radius of R0 = 5 µm and an axis overlapping the z-axis. The seed magnetic field B0 = 6 kT parallel to the z-axis is uniformly set over the entire domain. The four faces of the target parallel to the z-axis are normally irradiated by uniform laser pulses simultaneously, which are characterized by ?L = 0.8 µm, IL =3×10^21 Wcm^-2 and tL =50fs. Credit: © 2021 Masakatsu Murakami et al., High Power Laser Science and Engineering

    Recently, a research team at Osaka University has successfully demonstrated the generation of megatesla (MT)-order magnetic fields via three-dimensional particle simulations on laser-matter interaction. The strength of MT magnetic fields is 1-10 billion times stronger than geomagnetism (0.3-0.5 G), and these fields are expected to be observed only in the close vicinity of celestial bodies such as neutron stars or black holes. This result should facilitate an ambitious experiment to achieve MT-order magnetic fields in the laboratory, which is now in progress.

    Since the 19th century, scientists have strived to achieve the highest magnetic fields in the laboratory. To date, the highest magnetic field observed in the laboratory is in the kilotesla (kT)-order. In 2020, Masakatsu Murakami at Osaka University proposed a novel scheme called microtube implosions (MTI) [1, 2] to generate ultrahigh magnetic fields on the MT-order. Irradiating a micron-sized hollow cylinder with ultraintense and ultrashort laser pulses generates hot electrons with velocities close to the speed of light. Those hot electrons launch a cylindrically symmetric implosion of the inner wall ions towards the central axis. An applied pre-seeded magnetic field of the kilotesla-order, parallel to the central axis, bends the trajectories of ions and electrons in opposite directions because of the Lorentz force. Near the target axis, those bent trajectories of ions and electrons collectively form a strong spin current that generates MT-order magnetic fields.

    Supercomputer Simulations Reveal Scaling Laws

    In this study, one of the team members, Didar Shokov, has extensively conducted three-dimensional simulations using the supercomputer “OCTOPUS” at Osaka University’s Cybermedia Center. As a result, a distinct scaling law has been found relating the performance of the generation of the magnetic fields by MTI and such external parameters as applied laser intensity, laser energy, and target size.

    “Our simulation showed that ultrahigh megatesla magnetic fields, which were thought to be impossible to realize on earth, can be achieved using today’s laser technology. The scaling law and detailed temporal behavior of the magnetic fields in the target are expected to facilitate laboratory experiments using the Peta-watt laser system ‘LFEX’ at Osaka University’s Institute of Laser Engineering, which are now in progress,” Murakami says.

    Reference: “Laser scaling for generation of megatesla magnetic fields by microtube implosions” by D. Shokov,
    M. Murakami and J. J. Honrubia, 14 October 2021, High Power Laser Science and Engineering.
    DOI: 10.1017/hpl.2021.46

    Notes

    1. “Generation of megatesla magnetic fields by intense-laser-driven microtube implosions” by M. Murakami, J. J. Honrubia, K. Weichman, A. V. Arefiev and S. V. Bulanov, 6 October 2020, Scientific Reports.
      DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-73581-4
    2. YouTube Murakami’s lab: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eL4w1uGRk4U

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