25 research outputs found
Laser beam coupling with capillary discharge plasma for laser wakefield acceleration applications
One of the most robust methods, demonstrated up to date, of accelerating
electron beams by laser-plasma sources is the utilization of plasma channels
generated by the capillary discharges. These channels, i.e., plasma columns
with a minimum density along the laser pulse propagation axis, may optically
guide short laser pulses, thereby increasing the acceleration length, leading
to a more efficient electron acceleration. Although the spatial structure of
the installation is simple in principle, there may be some important effects
caused by the open ends of the capillary, by the supplying channels etc., which
require a detailed 3D modeling of the processes taking place in order to get a
detailed understanding and improve the operation. However, the discharge
plasma, being one of the most crucial components of the laser-plasma
accelerator, is not simulated with the accuracy and resolution required to
advance this promising technology. In the present work, such simulations are
performed using the code MARPLE. First, the process of the capillary filling
with a cold hydrogen before the discharge is fired, through the side supply
channels is simulated. The main goal of this simulation is to get a spatial
distribution of the filling gas in the region near the open ends of the
capillary. A realistic geometry is used for this and the next stage
simulations, including the insulators, the supplying channels as well as the
electrodes. Second, the simulation of the capillary discharge is performed with
the goal to obtain a time-dependent spatial distribution of the electron
density near the open ends of the capillary as well as inside the capillary.
Finally, to evaluate effectiveness of the beam coupling with the channeling
plasma wave guide and electron acceleration, modeling of laser-plasma
interaction was performed with the code INF&RNOComment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Laser-heated capillary discharge plasma waveguides for electron acceleration to 8 GeV
A plasma channel created by the combination of a capillary discharge and inverse Bremsstrahlung laser heating enabled the generation of electron bunches with energy up to 7.8 GeV in a laser-driven plasma accelerator. The capillary discharge created an initial plasma channel and was used to tune the plasma temperature, which optimized laser heating. Although optimized colder initial plasma temperatures reduced the ionization degree, subsequent ionization from the heater pulse created a fully ionized plasma on-axis. The heater pulse duration was chosen to be longer than the hydrodynamic timescale of ≈ 1 ns, such that later temporal slices were more efficiently guided by the channel created by the front of the pulse. Simulations are presented which show that this thermal self-guiding of the heater pulse enabled channel formation over 20 cm. The post-heated channel had lower on-axis density and increased focusing strength compared to relying on the discharge alone, which allowed for guiding of relativistically intense laser pulses with a peak power of 0.85 PW and wakefield acceleration over 15 diffraction lengths. Electrons were injected into the wake in multiple buckets and times, leading to several electron bunches with different peak energies. To create single electron bunches with low energy spread, experiments using localized ionization injection inside a capillary discharge waveguide were performed. A single injected bunch with energy 1.6 GeV, charge 38 pC, divergence 1 mrad, and relative energy spread below 2% full-width half-maximum was produced in a 3.3 cm-long capillary discharge waveguide. This development shows promise for mitigation of energy spread and future high efficiency staged acceleration experiments
Performance analysis of magnetic flux compression by plasma liner
International audiencein english. The paper presents the results of the theoretical and numerical performance analysis of the experimental scheme for amplification of magnetic flux intensity via its compression by plasma liner. 0D estimations and 2D computations results are compared. The simulations were carried out with the use of RMHD code MARPLE (IMM RAS). The scheme performance affected by the Rayleigh-Taylor instability, developed in the case of initially disturbed plasma shell density, is studied. The possible penetration of the compressor shell plasma from the discharge chamber into the load area results in the nonuniformity of magnetic pressure in it. The simulation proves the possibility of elimination of this unwanted effect by proper selection of the experiments parameters. The correlation of the numerical results for this kind of problems using a simplified 0D model and 2D RMHD simulation with the MARPLE code are demonstrated. The prospects of the plasma magnetic flux compression scheme are discussed. Original Russian Text © V.A. Gasilov, S.V. Dyachenko, A.S. Chuvatin, O.G. Olkhovskaya, A.S. Boldarev, E.L. Kartasheva, G.A. Bagdasarov, 2009, published in Matematicheskoe Modelirovanie, 2009, Vol. 21, No. 11, pp. 5773
Plasma channel formation in the knife-like focus of laser beam
The plasma channel formation in the focus of a knife-like nanosecond laser pulse irradiating a gas target is studied theoretically, and in gas-dynamics computer simulations. The distribution of the electromagnetic field in the focus region, obtained analytically, is used to calculate the energy deposition in the plasma, which then is implemented in the magnetohydrodynamic computer code. The modelling of the channel evolution shows that the plasma profile, which can guide the laser pulse, is formed by the tightly focused short knife-like lasers. The results of the simulations show that a proper choice of the convergence angle of a knife-like laser beam (determined by the focal length of the last cylindrical lens), and laser pulse duration may provide a sufficient degree of azimuthal symmetry of the formed plasma channel