1,585 research outputs found
Electron - positron cascades in multiple-laser optical traps
We present an analytical and numerical study of multiple-laser QED cascades
induced with linearly polarised laser pulses. We analyse different polarisation
orientations and propose a configuration that maximises the cascade
multiplicity and favours the laser absorption. We generalise the analytical
estimate for the cascade growth rate previously calculated in the field of two
colliding linearly polarised laser pulses and account for multiple laser
interaction. The estimate is verified by a comprehensive numerical study of
four-laser QED cascades across a range of different laser intensities with QED
PIC module of OSIRIS. We show that by using four linearly polarised 30 fs laser
pulses, one can convert more than 50 % of the total energy to gamma-rays
already at laser intensity . In this
configuration, the laser conversion efficiency is higher compared with the case
with two colliding lasers
Classical Radiation Reaction in Particle-In-Cell Simulations
Under the presence of ultra high intensity lasers or other intense
electromagnetic fields the motion of particles in the ultrarelativistic regime
can be severely affected by radiation reaction. The standard particle-in-cell
(PIC) algorithms do not include radiation reaction effects. Even though this is
a well known mechanism, there is not yet a definite algorithm nor a standard
technique to include radiation reaction in PIC codes. We have compared several
models for the calculation of the radiation reaction force, with the goal of
implementing an algorithm for classical radiation reaction in the Osiris
framework, a state-of-the-art PIC code. The results of the different models are
compared with standard analytical results, and the relevance/advantages of each
model are discussed. Numerical issues relevant to PIC codes such as resolution
requirements, application of radiation reaction to macro particles and
computational cost are also addressed. The Landau and Lifshitz reduced model is
chosen for implementation.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Particle Merging Algorithm for PIC Codes
Particle-in-cell merging algorithms aim to resample dynamically the
six-dimensional phase space occupied by particles without distorting
substantially the physical description of the system. Whereas various
approaches have been proposed in previous works, none of them seemed to be able
to conserve fully charge, momentum, energy and their associated distributions.
We describe here an alternative algorithm based on the coalescence of N massive
or massless particles, considered to be close enough in phase space, into two
new macro-particles. The local conservation of charge, momentum and energy are
ensured by the resolution of a system of scalar equations. Various simulation
comparisons have been carried out with and without the merging algorithm, from
classical plasma physics problems to extreme scenarios where quantum
electrodynamics is taken into account, showing in addition to the conservation
of local quantities, the good reproducibility of the particle distributions. In
case where the number of particles ought to increase exponentially in the
simulation box, the dynamical merging permits a considerable speedup, and
significant memory savings that otherwise would make the simulations impossible
to perform
Full-scale ab initio 3D PIC simulations of an all-optical radiation reaction configuration at
Using full-scale 3D particle-in-cell simulations we show that the radiation
reaction dominated regime can be reached in an all optical configuration
through the collision of a 1 GeV laser wakefield accelerated (LWFA)
electron bunch with a counter propagating laser pulse. In this configuration
radiation reaction significantly reduces the energy of the particle bunch, thus
providing clear experimental signatures for the process with currently
available lasers. We also show that the transition between classical and
quantum radiation reaction could be investigated in the same configuration with
laser intensities of
Modelling radiation emission in the transition from the classical to the quantum regime
An emissivity formula is derived using the generalised
Fermi-Weizacker-Williams method of virtual photons which accounts for the
recoil the charged particle experiences as it emits radiation. It is found that
through this derivation the formula obtained by Sokolov et al using QED
perturbation theory is recovered. The corrected emissivity formula is applied
to nonlinear Thomson scattering scenarios in the transition from the classical
to the quantum regime, for small values of the nonlinear quantum parameter
\chi. Good agreement is found between this method and a QED probabilistic
approach for scenarios where both are valid. In addition, signatures of the
quantum corrections are identified and explored.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, submitted for publicatio
Laser absorption via quantum electrodynamics cascades in counter propagating laser pulses
A model for laser light absorption in electron–positron plasmas self-consistently created via QED cascades is described. The laser energy is mainly absorbed due to hard photon emission via nonlinear Compton scattering. The degree of absorption depends on the laser intensity and the pulse duration. The QED cascades are studied with multi-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations complemented by a QED module and a macro-particle merging algorithm that allows to handle the exponential growth of the number of particles. Results range from moderate-intensity regimes (~ 10 PW) where the laser absorption is negligible to extreme intensities (>100 PW) where the degree of absorption reaches 80%. Our study demonstrates good agreement between the analytical model and simulations. The expected properties of the hard photon emission and the generated pair-plasma are investigated, and the experimental signatures for near-future laser facilities are discussed.info:eu-repo/semantics/submittedVersio
Seeded QED cascades in counterpropagating laser pulses
The growth rates of seeded QED cascades in counterpropagating lasers are calculated with first-principles two-and three-dimensional QED-PIC (particle-in-cell) simulations. The dependence of the growth rate on the laser polarization and intensity is compared with analytical models that support the findings of the simulations. The models provide insight regarding the qualitative trend of the cascade growth when the intensity of the laser field is varied. A discussion about the cascade's threshold is included, based on the analytical and numerical results. These results show that relativistic pair plasmas and efficient conversion from laser photons to. rays can be observed with the typical intensities planned to operate on future ultraintense laser facilities such as ELI or Vulcan.info:eu-repo/semantics/submittedVersio
QED vs. classical radiation reaction in the transition regime
We focus our analysis in the properties of an electron beam during/after collision with an intense pulse. The additional energy spread introduced by the stochastic nature of QED emission can be balanced by the average energy loss leading to overall energy spread reduction even in the QED regime.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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