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Experiments on the excitation of propagating surface plasmons (SPs) by ultrashort, high intensity laser interaction with grating targets are reviewed. At intensities exceeding $10^{19}~mbox{W cm}^{-2}$ on target, i.e. in the strongly relativistic regime of electron dynamics, multi-MeV electrons are accelerated by the SP field as dense bunches collimated in a near-tangent direction. By the use of a suitable blazed grating, the bunch charge can be increased up to $simeq $660 picoCoulomb. Intense XUV high harmonics (HH) diffracted by the grating are observed when a plasma with sub-micrometer scale is produced at the target surface by a controlled prepulse. When the SP is excited, the HH are strongly enhanced in a direction quasi-parallel to the electrons. Simulations show that the HH are boosted by nanobunching in the SP field of the electrons which scatter the laser field. Besides the static and dynamic tailoring of the target density profile, further control of electron and HH emission might be achieved by changing the SP duration using a laser pulse with rotating wavefront. This latter technique may be capable to produce nearly single-cycle SPs.
We report evidence for the first generation of XUV spectra from relativistic surface high-harmonic generation (SHHG) on plasma mirrors at a kilohertz repetition rate, emitted simultaneously and correlated to the emission of energetic electrons. We pr
Relativistic electrons are prodigious sources of photons. Beyond classical accelerators, ultra-intense laser interactions are of particular interest as they allow the coherent motion of relativistic electrons to be controlled and exploited as sources
We propose to use ultra-high intensity laser pulses with wavefront rotation (WFR) to produce short, ultra-intense surface plasma waves (SPW) on grating targets for electron acceleration. Combining a smart grating design with optimal WFR conditions id
We present experimental results showing the appearance of a near-continuum in the high-order harmonic generation (HHG) spectra of atomic and molecular species as the driving laser intensity of an infrared pulse increases. Detailed macroscopic simulat
X-ray devices are far superior to optical ones for providing nanometre spatial and attosecond temporal resolutions. Such resolution is indispensable in biology, medicine, physics, material sciences, and their applications. A bright ultrafast coherent