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Analogue gravity in laser-driven plasma

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

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Analogue gravity in laser-driven plasma. / Fiedler, Cezary.
Lancaster University, 2021. 130 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Harvard

APA

Fiedler, C. (2021). Analogue gravity in laser-driven plasma. [Doctoral Thesis, Lancaster University]. Lancaster University. https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1246

Vancouver

Fiedler C. Analogue gravity in laser-driven plasma. Lancaster University, 2021. 130 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1246

Author

Fiedler, Cezary. / Analogue gravity in laser-driven plasma. Lancaster University, 2021. 130 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{e127d4287faa463687027934c62173ce,
title = "Analogue gravity in laser-driven plasma",
abstract = "This thesis investigates whether laser-driven plasma can be used as an analogue model of gravity in order to investigate Hawking radiation. An action describing laser-driven plasma is derived, and effective metrics are obtained in various regimes from the resulting field equations. Effective metrics exhibiting different behaviour are analysed by considering different forms of the fields. One of the effective metrics has the required properties for the analysis of Hawking radiation. It is shown that for a near-IR laser the Hawking temperature is about 4.5 K, which is small compared to typical plasma temperatures. However the waist of the laser is shown to have significant impact on the resulting Hawking temperature. As such it may be possible to obtain Hawking temperatures of several hundred Kelvin with a pulse width of a few $\mu$m. A new approach to investigating quantum fluctuations in an underdense laser-driven plasma is also presented that naturally emerges from the model underpinning the above studies. It is shown that the 1-loop effective action is expressible in terms of a massless field theory on a dilatonic curved background. Plane wave perturbations to the field equations are analysed for fields which are linear in Minkowski coordinates, and two dispersion relations are obtained. The impact on a Gaussian wave packet is calculated, suggesting it may be possible to experimentally verify this theory by utilising an x-ray laser.",
author = "Cezary Fiedler",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1246",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Analogue gravity in laser-driven plasma

AU - Fiedler, Cezary

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - This thesis investigates whether laser-driven plasma can be used as an analogue model of gravity in order to investigate Hawking radiation. An action describing laser-driven plasma is derived, and effective metrics are obtained in various regimes from the resulting field equations. Effective metrics exhibiting different behaviour are analysed by considering different forms of the fields. One of the effective metrics has the required properties for the analysis of Hawking radiation. It is shown that for a near-IR laser the Hawking temperature is about 4.5 K, which is small compared to typical plasma temperatures. However the waist of the laser is shown to have significant impact on the resulting Hawking temperature. As such it may be possible to obtain Hawking temperatures of several hundred Kelvin with a pulse width of a few $\mu$m. A new approach to investigating quantum fluctuations in an underdense laser-driven plasma is also presented that naturally emerges from the model underpinning the above studies. It is shown that the 1-loop effective action is expressible in terms of a massless field theory on a dilatonic curved background. Plane wave perturbations to the field equations are analysed for fields which are linear in Minkowski coordinates, and two dispersion relations are obtained. The impact on a Gaussian wave packet is calculated, suggesting it may be possible to experimentally verify this theory by utilising an x-ray laser.

AB - This thesis investigates whether laser-driven plasma can be used as an analogue model of gravity in order to investigate Hawking radiation. An action describing laser-driven plasma is derived, and effective metrics are obtained in various regimes from the resulting field equations. Effective metrics exhibiting different behaviour are analysed by considering different forms of the fields. One of the effective metrics has the required properties for the analysis of Hawking radiation. It is shown that for a near-IR laser the Hawking temperature is about 4.5 K, which is small compared to typical plasma temperatures. However the waist of the laser is shown to have significant impact on the resulting Hawking temperature. As such it may be possible to obtain Hawking temperatures of several hundred Kelvin with a pulse width of a few $\mu$m. A new approach to investigating quantum fluctuations in an underdense laser-driven plasma is also presented that naturally emerges from the model underpinning the above studies. It is shown that the 1-loop effective action is expressible in terms of a massless field theory on a dilatonic curved background. Plane wave perturbations to the field equations are analysed for fields which are linear in Minkowski coordinates, and two dispersion relations are obtained. The impact on a Gaussian wave packet is calculated, suggesting it may be possible to experimentally verify this theory by utilising an x-ray laser.

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1246

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1246

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -