60 research outputs found
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Femtosecond Pump-Probe Diagnostics Of Preformed Plasma Channels
We report on recent ultrafast pump-probe experiments 28 in He plasma waveguides using 800 nm, 80 fs pump pulses of 0.2 x 1018 W/cm2 peak guided intensity, and single orthogonally-polarized 800 nm probe pulses with similar to0.1% of pump intensity. The main results are: (1) We observe frequency-domain interference between the probe and a weak, depolarized component of the pump that differs substantially in mode shape from the injected pump pulse; (2) we observe spectral blue-shifts in the transmitted probe that are not evident in the transmitted pump. The evidence indicates that pump depolarization and probe blue-shifts both originate near the channel entrance.Physic
Reconstructing nonlinear plasma wakefields using a generalized temporally encoded spectral shifting analysis
We generalize the temporally encoded spectral shifting (TESS) analysis for measuring plasma wakefields using spectral interferometry to dissimilar probe pulses of arbitrary spectral profile and to measuring nonlinear wakefields. We demonstrate that the Gaussian approximation used up until now results in a substantial miscalculation of the wakefield amplitude, by a factor of up to two. A method to accurately measure higher amplitude quasilinear and nonlinear wakefields is suggested, using an extension to the TESS procedure, and we place some limits on its accuracy in these regimes. These extensions and improvements to the analysis demonstrate its potential for rapid and accurate on-shot diagnosis of plasma wakefields, even at low plasma densities
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Plasma Channels And Laser Pulse Tailoring For Gev Laser-Plasma Accelerators
We have demonstrated distortion-free guiding of I TW pulses at near relativistic intensity (0.2 x 10(18) W/cm(2)) over 60 Rayleigh lengths at 20 Hz repetition rate in a preformed helium plasma channel. As steps toward efficient channeled Laser Wakefield Acceleration up to the dephasing limit, we have upgraded our laser system from I to 4 TW, adapted femtosecond interferometric diagnostics to probe plasma density fluctuations inside the channel, and developed detailed strategies for managing ionization distortions at the channel entrance and exit at the upgraded intensity. We also report simulations, and preliminary experiments, that explore a strategy for Raman-seeding laser pulses to coherently control both unchanneled and channeled LWFA in order to lower the laser energy threshold and increase the repetition rate of election pickup and acceleration.Physic
Status and Objectives of the Dedicated Accelerator R&D Facility "SINBAD" at DESY
We present a status update on the dedicated R\&D facility SINBAD which is
currently under construction at DESY. The facility will host multiple
independent experiments on the acceleration of ultra-short electron bunches and
novel, high gradient acceleration methods. The first experiment is the
ARES-experiment with a normal conducting 100\,MeV S-band linac at its core. We
present the objectives of this experiment ranging from the study of compression
techniques to sub-fs level to its application as injector for various advanced
acceleration schemes e.g. the plans to use ARES as a test-site for DLA
experiments in the context of the ACHIP collaboration. The time-line including
the planned extension with laser driven plasma-wakefield acceleration is
presented. The second initial experiment is AXSIS which aims to accelerate
fs-electron bunches to 15\,MeV in a THz driven dielectric structure and
subsequently create X-rays by inverse Compton scattering.Comment: EAAC'17 conference proceeding
Ultrafast Diagnostics for Electron Beams from Laser Plasma Accelerators
We present an overview of diagnostic techniques for measuring key parameters of electron bunches from Laser Plasma Accelerators (LPAs). The diagnostics presented here were chosen because they highlight the unique advantages (e.g., diverse forms of electromagnetic emission) and difficulties (e.g., shot-to-shot variability) associated with LPAs. Non destructiveness and high resolution (in space and time and energy) are key attributes that enable the formation of a comprehensive suite of simultaneous diagnostics which are necessary for the full characterization of the ultrashort, but highly-variable electron bunches from LPAs
Wavefront-sensor-based electron density measurements for laser-plasma accelerators
Characterization of the electron density in laser produced plasmas is presented using direct wavefront analysis of a probe laser beam. The performance of a laser-driven plasma-wakefield accelerator depends on the plasma wavelength, hence on the electron density. Density measurements using a conventional folded-wave interferometer and using a commercial wavefront sensor are compared for different regimes of the laser-plasma accelerator. It is shown that direct wavefront measurements agree with interferometric measurements and, because of the robustness of the compact commercial device, have greater phase sensitivity, straightforward analysis, improving shot-to-shot plasma-density diagnostics
On the production of flat electron bunches for laser wake field acceleration
We suggest a novel method for injection of electrons into the acceleration
phase of particle accelerators, producing low emittance beams appropriate even
for the demanding high energy Linear Collider specifications. In this paper we
work out the injection into the acceleration phase of the wake field in a
plasma behind a high intensity laser pulse, taking advantage of the laser
polarization and focusing. With the aid of catastrophe theory we categorize the
injection dynamics. The scheme uses the structurally stable regime of
transverse wake wave breaking, when electron trajectory self-intersection leads
to the formation of a flat electron bunch. As shown in three-dimensional
particle-in-cell simulations of the interaction of a laser pulse in a
line-focus with an underdense plasma, the electrons, injected via the
transverse wake wave breaking and accelerated by the wake wave, perform
betatron oscillations with different amplitudes and frequencies along the two
transverse coordinates. The polarization and focusing geometry lead to a way to
produce relativistic electron bunches with asymmetric emittance (flat beam). An
approach for generating flat laser accelerated ion beams is briefly discussed.Comment: 29 pages, 5 figure
Ultrafast Diagnostics for Electron Beams from Laser Plasma Accelerators
We present an overview of diagnostic techniques for measuring key parameters of electron bunches from Laser Plasma Accelerators (LPAs). The diagnostics presented here were chosen because they highlight the unique advantages (e.g., diverse forms of electromagnetic emission) and difficulties (e.g., shot-to-shot variability) associated with LPAs. Non destructiveness and high resolution (in space and time and energy) are key attributes that enable the formation of a comprehensive suite of simultaneous diagnostics which are necessary for the full characterization of the ultrashort, but highly-variable electron bunches from LPAs
Design and sensitivity analysis of a single sided pumped THz booster
We present the design of a THz driven booster which is capable of accelerating electrons from 55 keV up to above 430 keV kinetic energy. This device is a 3-layer segmented structure and requires a 400-µJ single-cycle THz pulse with center frequency at 300 GHz. Sensitivity of the output beam dynamics to the input parameters and manufacturing tolerances of the booster is also investigated in this paper
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