Microscopy X-ray Imaging enriched with Small Angle X-ray Scattering for few nanometer resolution reveals shock waves and compression in intense short pulse laser irradiation of solids

in: arXiv (2025)
Kluge, Thomas; Hirsch-Passicos, Arthur; Schulz, Jannis; Frost, Mungo; Galtier, Eric; Gauthier, Maxence; Grenzer, Jörg; Gutt, Christian; Huang, Lingen; Hübner, Uwe; Ikeya, Megan; Lee, Hae Ja; Khaghani, Dimitri; Martin, Willow Moon; Marré, Brian Edward; Nakatsutsumi, Motoaki; Ordyna, Pawel; Paschke-Brühl, Franziska; Pelka, Alexander; Randolph, Lisa; Schlenvoigt, Hans-Peter; Schoenwaelder, Christopher; Smid, Michal; Yang, Long; Schramm, Ulrich; Cowan, Thomas E.
Understanding how laser pulses compress solids into high-energy-density states requires diagnostics that simultaneously resolve macroscopic geometry and nanometer-scale structure. Here we present a combined X-ray imaging (XRM) and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) approach that bridges this diagnostic gap. Using the Matter in Extreme Conditions end station at LCLS, we irradiated 25-micrometer copper wires with 45-fs, 0.9-J, 800-nm pulses at 3.5e19 W/cm2 while probing with 8.2-keV XFEL pulses. XRM visualizes the evolution of ablation, compression, and inward-propagating fronts with about 200-nm resolution, while SAXS quantifies their nanometer-scale sharpness through the time-resolved evolution of scattering streaks. The joint analysis reveals that an initially smooth compression steepens into a nanometer-sharp shock front after roughly 18 ps, consistent with an analytical steepening model and hydrodynamic simulations. The front reaches a velocity of about 25 km/s and a lateral width of several tens of micrometers, demonstrating for the first time the direct observation of shock formation and decay at solid density with few-nanometer precision. This integrated XRM-SAXS method establishes a quantitative, multiscale diagnostic of laser-driven shocks in dense plasmas relevant to inertial confinement fusion, warm dense matter, and planetary physics.

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