63 research outputs found
Summary Report of Working Group 6: Laser-Plasma Acceleration
A summary is given of presentations and discussions in theLaser-Plasma Acceleration Working Group at the 2006 Advanced AcceleratorConcepts Workshop. Presentation highlights include: widespreadobservation of quasi-monoenergetic electrons; good agreement betweenmeasured and simulated beam properties; the first demonstration oflaser-plasma acceleration up to 1 GeV; single-shot visualization of laserwakefield structure; new methods for measuring<100 fs electronbunches; and new methods for "machining" laser-plasma acceleratorstructures. Discussion of future direction includes: developing a roadmapfor laser-plasma acceleration beyond 1 GeV; a debate over injection andguiding; benchmarking simulations with improved wake diagnostics;petawatt laser technology for future laser-plasmaaccelerators
Low transverse emittance electron bunches from two-color laser-ionization injection
A method is proposed to generate low emittance electron bunches from two
color laser pulses in a laser-plasma accelerator. A two-region gas structure is
used, containing a short region of a high-Z gas (e.g., krypton) for ionization
injection, followed by a longer region of a low-Z gas for post-acceleration. A
long-laser-wavelength (e.g., 5 micron) pump pulse excites plasma wake without
triggering the inner-shell electron ionization of the high-Z gas due to low
electric fields. A short-laser-wavelength (e.g., 0.4 micron) injection pulse,
located at a trapping phase of the wake, ionizes the inner-shell electrons of
the high-Z gas, resulting in ionization-induced trapping. Compared with a
single-pulse ionization injection, this scheme offers an order of magnitude
smaller residual transverse momentum of the electron bunch, which is a result
of the smaller vector potential amplitude of the injection pulse
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Laser and electron deflection from transverse asymmetries in laser-plasma accelerators.
We report on the deflection of laser pulses and accelerated electrons in a laser-plasma accelerator (LPA) by the effects of laser pulse front tilt and transverse density gradients. Asymmetry in the plasma index of refraction leads to laser steering, which can be due to a density gradient or spatiotemporal coupling of the laser pulse. The transverse forces from the skewed plasma wave can also lead to electron deflection relative to the laser. Quantitative models are proposed for both the laser and electron steering, which are confirmed by particle-in-cell simulations. Experiments with the BELLA Petawatt Laser are presented which show controllable 0.1-1 mrad laser and electron beam deflection from laser pulse front tilt. This has potential applications for electron beam pointing control, which is of paramount importance for LPA applications
Plasma Equilibrium inside Various Cross-Section Capillary Discharges
Plasma properties inside a hydrogen-filled capillary discharge waveguide were
modeled with dissipative magnetohydrodynamic simulations to enable analysis of
capillaries of circular and square cross-sections implying that square
capillaries can be used to guide circularly-symmetric laser beams. When the
quasistationary stage of the discharge is reached, the plasma and temperature
in the vicinity of the capillary axis has almost the same profile for both the
circular and square capillaries. The effect of cross-section on the electron
beam focusing properties were studied using the simulation-derived magnetic
field map. Particle tracking simulations showed only slight effects on the
electron beam symmetry in the horizontal and diagonal directions for square
capillary.Comment: 6 pages, 10 figure
Detecting radiation reaction at moderate laser intensities.
We propose a new method of detecting radiation reaction effects in the motion of particles subjected to laser pulses of moderate intensity and long duration. The effect becomes sizable for particles that gain almost no energy through the interaction with the laser pulse. Hence, there are regions of parameter space in which radiation reaction is actually the dominant influence on charged particle motion
Preparation For Laser Wakefield Experiments Driven By The Texas Petawatt Laser System
Laboratories around the world are planning petawatt laser driven experiments. The Texas petawatt laser offers the ability to demonstrate laser wake field acceleration (LWFA) in a unique regime with pulse duration (similar to 160 fs) shorter than other petawatt scale systems currently in operation or under development. By focusing the 1.25 PW, 200 J, 160 Is pulses to peak intensity similar to 10(19) W/cm(2), multi-GeV electron bunches can be produced from a low density He gas jet. The rarefied plasma density (5x10(16) - 10(17) cm(-3)) required for near-resonant LWFA minimizes plasma lensing and offers long dephasing length for electron acceleration over distances (similar to 10 cm) exceeding the Rayleigh range. Because of the high power, the laser can be focused to a spot (r(0) similar to 100 microns) greater than the plasma wavelength (r(0) > lambda(p)), thus minimizing radial propagation effects. Together these properties enable the laser pulse to self-guide without the use of a preformed channel lending simplicity and stability to the overall acceleration process. Particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations show the laser experiences self-focusing which, because of ultrashort pulse duration, does not lead to a collapse of the wakefield and can generate over 3 GeV electron energy. The presented material will include details of initial measurements of the Texas petawatt laser system, simulations of laser wakefield acceleration for the given laser parameters and the experimental setup currently under construction.Physic
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