Topics & invited lecturers

Photo credit: © École polytechnique – J.Barande

This third edition of the PLASMAScience Summer School will focus on the interactions between lasers and plasmas.

The lectures will cover the following topics:

  • inertial fusion for energy;
  • laboratory astrophysics;
  • laser-plasma accelerators;
  • hadron & electron sources and their applications (from nuclear physics to SFQED);
  • photon sources & plasma optics;
  • numerical simulations;
  • data & machine-learning.

See lecture descriptions below

Invited lecturers

Lecture topics

Plasma Optics

Matthew Edwards - Standford University

An introduction to plasma-based optics suitable for building and manipulating ultra-high-power lasers, including gratings, photonic crystals, lenses, and Raman and Brillouin plasma amplifiers.

HHG / attosecond plasma physics

Julia Mikhailova - Princeton University

I will cover relativistic HHG, starting with single electron dynamics in a relativistic plane wave and progressing to overdense plasma mirrors, relativistic HHG, coherent synchrotron emission, attosecond pulses, and a path to the Schwinger limit. This will include both theory and experiments.

An introduction to inertial fusion

Dan Clark - Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

My lecture will cover the basic 0-D and 1-D physics principles that govern ICF.  I will emphasize the physics constraints that dictate the length and time scales of laboratory ICF, how ICF ignition has been achieved, and why ICF implosions are designed the way that they are.  I will also start with a brief historical sketch of the evolution of the field of ICF research from 1960 until today.  

The plasma physics models that underpin inertial fusion simulations

Steven Rose - Imperial College London, University of Oxford

I will describe the models that are commonly used in inertial fusion simulations (such as the radiative opacity and equation of state) together with the independent experimental tests that have been done to validate them.

Applications of machine learning in laser plasma interactions

Matthew Streeter - Queen's University Belfast

A short seminar on existing work applying machine learning to laser-plasma interactions and on how developments in other disciplines can be translated to laser plasma research. The second part will be a practical session where the students will perform Bayesian Optimisation and training of Deep learning models using BoTorch and PyTorch python packages.

Laboratory Astrophysics - probing the fundamental processes of the cosmos on Earth

Brian Reville - Max-Planck-Institut

Laboratory Astrophysics concerns the study of astrophysically relevant processes in controlled laboratory conditions. This requires the careful design of experiments that can isolate and probe the essential physical mechanisms under investigation. I will review the history of the field, a selection of methods that are applied, and future frontiers in the field.

Laser plasma proton acceleration in light of relativistic transparency

Ulrich Schramm - Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf

Laser proton acceleration has evolved since the discovery of target normal sheat acceleration, when tailored target transparency enables efficient energy transfer. Basics as well as latest developments and applications will be discussed. 

Laser wakefield accelerators and applications

Maxence Thévenet - DESY

This course is an introduction to laser-driven plasma wakefield acceleration. Starting with first-principles, we will go through the basic theory of this technology, provide practical considerations and remaining challenges, and discuss the applications.

See weekly schedule here