109 research outputs found
Inverse modelling-based reconstruction of the Chernobyl source term available for long-range transport
International audienceThe reconstruction of the Chernobyl accident source term has been previously carried out using core inventories, but also back and forth confrontations between model simulations and activity concentration or deposited activity measurements. The approach presented in this paper is based on inverse modelling techniques. It relies both on the activity concentration measurements and on the adjoint of a chemistry-transport model. The location of the release is assumed to be known, and one is looking for a source term available for long-range transport that depends both on time and altitude. The method relies on the maximum entropy on the mean principle and exploits source positivity. The inversion results are mainly sensitive to two tuning parameters, a mass scale and the scale of the prior errors in the inversion. To overcome this hardship, we resort to the statistical L-curve method to estimate balanced values for these two parameters. Once this is done, many of the retrieved features of the source are robust within a reasonable range of parameter values. Our results favour the acknowledged three-step scenario, with a strong initial release (26 to 27 April), followed by a weak emission period of four days (28 April–1 May) and again a release, longer but less intense than the initial one (2 May–6 May). The retrieved quantities of iodine-131, caesium-134 and caesium-137 that have been released are in good agreement with the latest reported estimations. Yet, a stronger apportionment of the total released activity is ascribed to the first period and less to the third one. Finer chronological details are obtained, such as a sequence of eruptive episodes in the first two days, likely related to the modulation of the boundary layer diurnal cycle. In addition, the first two-day release surges are found to have effectively reached an altitude up to the top of the domain (5000 m)
Quasimonoenergetic electron beams produced by colliding cross-polarized laser pulses in underdense plasmas
The interaction of two laser pulses in an underdense plasma has proven to be
able to inject electrons in plasma waves, thus providing a stable and tunable
source of electrons. Whereas previous works focused on the "beatwave" injection
scheme in which two lasers with the same polarization collide in a plasma, this
present letter studies the effect of polarization and more specifically the
interaction of two colliding cross-polarized laser pulses. It is shown both
theoretically and experimentally that electrons can also be pre-accelerated and
injected by the stochastic heating occurring at the collision of two
cross-polarized lasers and thus, a new regime of optical injection is
demonstrated. It is found that injection with cross-polarized lasers occurs at
higher laser intensities.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Modeling terahertz emissions from energetic electrons and ions in foil targets irradiated by ultraintense femtosecond laser pulses
Terahertz (THz) emissions from fast electron and ion currents driven in
relativistic, femtosecond laser-foil interactions are examined theoretically.
We first consider the radiation from the energetic electrons exiting the
backside of the target. Our kinetic model takes account of the coherent
transition radiation due to these electrons crossing the plasma-vacuum
interface as well as of the synchrotron radiation due to their deflection and
deceleration in the sheath field they set up in vacuum. After showing that both
mechanisms tend to largely compensate each other when all the electrons are
pulled back into the target, we investigate the scaling of the net radiation
with the sheath field strength. We then demonstrate the sensitivity of this
radiation to a percent-level fraction of escaping electrons. We also study the
influence of the target thickness and laser focusing. The same sheath field
that confines most of the fast electrons around the target rapidly sets into
motion the surface ions. We describe the THz emission from these accelerated
ions and their accompanying hot electrons by means of a plasma expansion model
that allows for finite foil size and multidimensional effects. Again, we
explore the dependencies of this radiation mechanism on the laser-target
parameters. Under conditions typical of current ultrashort laser-solid
experiments, we find that the THz radiation from the expanding plasma is much
less energetic -- by one to three orders of magnitude -- than that due to the
early-time motion of the fast electrons
Enhancement of betatron x rays through asymmetric laser wakefield generated in transverse density gradients
Laser wakefield acceleration of electrons usually offers an axisymmetry around the laser propagation axis. Thus, the accelerating electrons that are focused on axis often execute small transverse oscillations. In this article, we propose a simple scheme to break this symmetry, which enhances the transverse wiggling of electrons and boosts the betatron radiation emission. Through 3D particle-in-cell simulations, we show that sending the laser with a small angle of incidence on a transverse plasma density gradient generates an asymmetric wakefield. It first provokes injection and then increases the wiggling of the electrons through the transverse shifting of the wakefield axis which occurs when the laser pulse leaves the gradient. Consequently, we show that the radiated energy per unit of charge can increase by a factor >20 when using this scheme, and that the critical energy of the radiation quintuples compared with a reference case without the transverse density gradient
Optical Transverse Injection in Laser-Plasma Acceleration
International audienceLaser-wakefield acceleration constitutes a promising technology for future electron accelerators. A crucial step in such an accelerator is the injection of electrons into the wakefield, which will largely determine the properties of the extracted beam. We present here a new paradigm of colliding-pulse injection, which allows us to generate high-quality electron bunches having both a very low emittance (0.17  mm·mrad) and a low energy spread (2%), while retaining a high charge (∼100  pC) and a short duration (3 fs). In this paradigm, the pulse collision provokes a transient expansion of the accelerating bubble, which then leads to transverse electron injection. This mechanism contrasts with previously observed optical injection mechanisms, which were essentially longitudinal. We also specify the range of parameters in which this new type of injection occurs and show that it is within reach of existing high-intensity laser facilities
Numerical growth of emittance in simulations of laser-wakefield acceleration
International audienceTransverse emittance is a crucial feature of laser-wakefield accelerators, yet accurately reproducing its value in numerical simulations remains challenging. It is shown here that, when the charge of the bunch exceeds a few tens of picocoulombs, particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations erroneously overestimate the emittance. This is mostly due the interaction of spurious Cherenkov radiation with the bunch, which leads to a steady growth of emittance during the simulation. A new computational scheme is proposed, which is free of spurious Cherenkov radiation. It can be easily implemented in existing PIC codes and leads to a substantial reduction of the emittance growth
Optically controlled laser–plasma electron accelerator for compact gamma-ray sources
Generating quasi-monochromatic, femtosecond γ-ray pulses via Thomson scattering (TS) demands exceptional electron beam (e-beam) quality, such as percent-scale energy spread and five-dimensional brightness over 1016 Am–2.We show that near-GeV e-beams with these metrics can be accelerated in a cavity of electron density, driven with an incoherent stack of Joule-scale laser pulses through ammsize, dense plasma (n0 ~ 1019 cm−3). Changing the time delay, frequency difference, and energy ratio of the stack components controls the e-beam phase space on the femtosecond scale, while the modest energy of the optical driver helps afford kHz-scale repetition rate at manageable average power. Blue-shifting one stack component by a considerable fraction of the carrier frequency makes the stack immune to self-compression. This, in turn, minimizes uncontrolled variation in the cavity shape, suppressing continuous injection of ambient plasma electrons, preserving a single, ultra-bright electron bunch. In addition, weak focusing of the trailing component of the stack induces periodic injection, generating, in a single shot, a train of bunches with controllable energy spacing and femtosecond synchronization. These designer e-beams, inaccessible to conventional acceleration methods, generate, via TS, gigawatt γ-ray pulses (or multi-color pulse trains) with the mean energy in the range of interest for nuclear photonics (4–16MeV), containing over 106 photons within a microsteradian-scale observation cone
Observation of longitudinal and transverse self-injections in laser-plasma accelerators
Laser-plasma accelerators can produce high quality electron beams, up to
giga-electronvolts in energy, from a centimeter scale device. The properties of
the electron beams and the accelerator stability are largely determined by the
injection stage of electrons into the accelerator. The simplest mechanism of
injection is self-injection, in which the wakefield is strong enough to trap
cold plasma electrons into the laser wake. The main drawback of this method is
its lack of shot-to-shot stability. Here we present experimental and numerical
results that demonstrate the existence of two different self-injection
mechanisms. Transverse self-injection is shown to lead to low stability and
poor quality electron beams, because of a strong dependence on the intensity
profile of the laser pulse. In contrast, longitudinal injection, which is
unambiguously observed for the first time, is shown to lead to much more stable
acceleration and higher quality electron beams.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
- …