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On the upper limit of laser intensity attainable in non-ideal vacuum

Published 30 Nov 2020 in physics.plasm-ph and physics.optics | (2011.14656v1)

Abstract: The upper limit of the laser field strength in perfect vacuum is usually considered as the Schwinger field, corresponding to ~1029W/cm2. We investigate such limitations under realistic non-ideal vacuum conditions and find out that intensity suppression appears starting from 1025W/cm2, showing an upper threshold at 1026W/cm2 level if the residual electron density in chamber surpasses 109cm-3. This is because the presence of residual electrons triggers the avalanche of quantum-electrodynamics cascade that creates copious electron and positron pairs. The leptons are further trapped within the driving laser field due to radiation-reaction, which significantly depletes the laser energy. The relationship between the attainable intensity and the vacuity is given according to particle-in-cell simulations and theoretical analysis. These results answer a critical problem on the achievable light intensity based on present vacuum conditions and provide a guideline for future 100's-Petawatt class laser development.

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