Sarri, G. and Poder, K. and Cole, J. M. and Schumaker, W. and Di Piazza, A. and Reville, B. and Dzelzainis, T. and Doria, D. and Gizzi, L. A. and Grittani, G. and Kar, S. and Keitel, C. H. and Krushelnick, K. and Kuschel, S. and Mangles, S. P. D. and Najmudin, Z. and Shukla, N. and Silva, L. O. and Symes, D. and Thomas, A. G. R. and Vargas, M. and Vieira, J. and Zepf, M. (2015) Generation of neutral and high-density electron-positron pair plasmas in the laboratory. Nature Communications, 6: 6747. ISSN 2041-1723
Full text not available from this repository.Abstract
Electron-positron pair plasmas represent a unique state of matter, whereby there exists an intrinsic and complete symmetry between negatively charged (matter) and positively charged (antimatter) particles. These plasmas play a fundamental role in the dynamics of ultra-massive astrophysical objects and are believed to be associated with the emission of ultra-bright gamma-ray bursts. Despite extensive theoretical modelling, our knowledge of this state of matter is still speculative, owing to the extreme difficulty in recreating neutral matter-antimatter plasmas in the laboratory. Here we show that, by using a compact laser-driven setup, ion-free electron-positron plasmas with unique characteristics can be produced. Their charge neutrality (same amount of matter and antimatter), high-density and small divergence finally open up the possibility of studying electron-positron plasmas in controlled laboratory experiments.