laserproton
Laserproton is a term used in high‐energy physics and laser science to refer to protons that are accelerated by intense laser pulses. The phenomenon is part of laser‐driven ion acceleration, which began in the early 1990s when powerful laser systems enabled the production of particle beams with energies far beyond those generated by conventional radio‑frequency accelerators. In a typical experimental setup, a short, high‑intensity laser (10^18–10^21 W cm^−2) is focused onto a solid target. The laser field ionizes the target surface, creating a hot plasma and an intense electric field that accelerates surface protons—usually from hydrocarbon contaminants—to tens of megaelectronvolts.
The basic mechanism of laserproton acceleration is often described by the Target Normal Sheath Acceleration (TNSA)
Laserproton beams have several potential applications. In medicine, they could enable compact hadrontherapy for cancer treatment,