Research

Physical Sciences

Title :

Exploring quantum electrodynamic plasmas at the new laser intensity frontier

Area of research :

Physical Sciences

Principal Investigator :

Prof. Devki Nandan Gupta, University Of Delhi

Timeline Start Year :

2023

Timeline End Year :

2026

Contact info :

Equipments :

Details

Executive Summary :

Advances in laser technology have enabled the focusing of light to extreme intensities, capable of creating exotic states of matter, typically characterized as high temperature plasma - the forth state of matter, in which the electrons and ion matter constituents are moving around with high velocity. New ultrahigh intensity lasers, due to come online in the next few years at international research facilities, will focus light to ten times higher intensity that is achievable at present. This will be sufficient to create an entirely new state of plasma in which quantum electrodynamics (QED) processes play an important role. This new state is the so-called QED-plasma. This state of matter is largely unexplored in the laboratory and yet will play a crucial role in many of the experiments to be performed using next generation high power lasers. While QED theory is well established for the interaction of single particles, but QED-plasmas are complex systems of very many particles. This creates a challenge as in quantum theory all possible interactions must be considered and in QED-plasmas the large number of particles gives far too many possibilities for standard QED theory to be used. While semi-classical models have been developed which include what are expected to be the most important quantum effects, these have yet to be tested experimentally. PIs will conduct a series of computer simulation of this work to test the models of QED interactions in strong electromagnetic fields for the first time using existing particle accelerator and high power laser parameters. We will then predict the outcome of this model to design experiments to generate and explore the first QED-plasma in the laboratory, which will be subsequently performed on new next generation high-intensity laser facilities. QED-plasmas are postulated to play a key role in extreme astrophysical environments such as in the extremely strong magnetic fields around pulsars, for example populating the magnetosphere with an electron-positron plasma in a cascade of antimatter production. The demonstration and investigation of the QED plasma state in simulation will give us the opportunity to probe this physics for the first time.

Total Budget (INR):

25,33,696

Organizations involved