PULSAR has developed a complete theoretical, numerical and experimental platform to characterize, understand and control nanometric plasmas generated in the bulk of transparent materials. The energy deposition process is crucial to understand the structuration of matter that follows after the laser pulse went through the medium. PULSAR team has built two complementary numerical codes to describe laser matter interaction when an ultrashort, femtosecond, pulse propagates inside a transparent medium such as glass and generates a plasma. In parallel, a novel experimental approach for plasma characterization has been built.
The fundamental insights offered by simulations and characterization tools have enabled the development of new means to confine laser-matter interaction, to successfully increase ablation efficiency in various geometries. Our results have been reported, to date, in 16 journal publications, 2 book chapters, 31 invited presentations, 34 contributions to international conferences.