JOURNAL ARTICLE

Remote Detection of Uranium Using Self-Focusing Intense Femtosecond Laser Pulses

M. BurgerP. J. SkrodzkiLauren A. FinneyJohn NeesIgor Jovanovic

Year: 2020 Journal:   Remote Sensing Vol: 12 (8)Pages: 1281-1281   Publisher: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

Abstract

Optical measurement techniques can address certain important challenges associated with nuclear safety and security. Detection of uranium over long distances presents one such challenge that is difficult to realize with traditional ionizing radiation detection, but may benefit from the use of techniques based on intense femtosecond laser pulses. When a high-power laser pulse propagates in air, it experiences collapse and confinement into filaments over an extended distance even without external focusing. In our experiments, we varied the initial pulse chirp to optimize the emission signal from the laser-produced uranium plasma at an extended distance. While the ablation efficiency of filaments formed by self-focusing is known to be significantly lower when compared to filaments produced by external focusing, we show that filaments formed by self-focusing can still generate luminous spectroscopic signatures of uranium detectable within seconds over a 10-m range. The intensity of uranium emission varies periodically with laser chirp, which is attributed to the interplay among self-focusing, defocusing, and multi-filament fragmentation along the beam propagation axis. Grouping of multi-filaments incident on target is found to be correlated with the uranium emission intensity. The results show promise towards long-range detection, advancing the diagnostics and analytical capabilities in ultrafast laser-based spectroscopy of high-Z elements.

Keywords:
Laser Femtosecond Uranium Chirp Optics Ultrashort pulse Self-focusing Materials science Protein filament Physics Optoelectronics Laser beams Nuclear physics

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18
Cited By
2.29
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
46
Refs
0.86
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
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Citation History

Topics

Laser-induced spectroscopy and plasma
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanics of Materials
Laser-Matter Interactions and Applications
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Laser-Plasma Interactions and Diagnostics
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Nuclear and High Energy Physics
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