The absolutely calibrated K-shell spectra emitted from
short-living aluminum plasmas at laser intensities of 5 ×
1015–4 × 1018 W/cm2
are reported. The experiments performed with the constant energy,
variable-length laser pulses (1.5 ps–1 ns) are modeled by the
one-dimensional (1D) hydrodynamics code, including nonlinear resonance
absorption of the laser radiation, fast electron acceleration, and
energy transfer into the target. The characteristic features of the
measured and the postprocessed spectra are outlined. The spatial
and temporal profiles of the emitted spectra are presented;
the scaling rules for the conversion efficiency of the laser
radiation into the line X-ray emission are discussed.