A Bayesian perspective on single-shot laser characterization
Abstract
We introduce a Bayesian framework for measuring spatio-temporal couplings (STCs) in ultra-intense lasers that reconceptualizes what constitutes a 'single-shot' measurement. Moving beyond traditional distinctions between single- and multi-shot devices, our approach provides rigorous criteria for determining when measurements can truly resolve individual laser shots rather than statistical averages. This framework shows that single-shot capability is not an intrinsic device property but emerges from the relationship between measurement precision and inherent parameter variability. Implementing this approach with a new measurement device at the ATLAS-3000 petawatt laser, we provide the first quantitative uncertainty bounds on pulse front tilt and curvature. Notably, we observe that our Bayesian method reduces uncertainty by up to 60% compared to traditional approaches. Through this analysis, we reveal how the interplay between measurement precision and intrinsic system variability defines achievable resolution -- insights that have direct implications for applications where precise control of laser-matter interaction is critical.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2502.03100,
title = {A Bayesian perspective on single-shot laser characterization},
author = {J. Esslinger and N. Weisse and C. Eberle and J. Schroeder and S. Howard and P. Norreys and S. Karsch and A. Döpp},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2502.03100},
year = {2025}
}