15 research outputs found
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Laser-plasma ion beam booster based on hollow-channel magnetic vortex acceleration
Laser-driven ion acceleration provides ultrashort, high-charge, low-emittance beams, which are desirable for a wide range of high-impact applications. Yet after decades of research, a significant increase in maximum ion energy is still needed. This paper introduces a quality-preserving staging concept for ultraintense ion bunches that is seamlessly applicable from the nonrelativistic plasma source to the relativistic regime. Full three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations prove robustness and capture of a high-charge proton bunch, suitable for readily available and near-term laser facilities.
Published by the American Physical Society
202
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Development of high gradient laser wakefield accelerators towards nuclear detection applications at LBNL
Compact high-energy linacs are important to applications including monochromatic gamma sources for nuclear material security applications. Recent laser wakefield accelerator experiments at LBNL demonstrated narrow energy spread beams, now with energies of up to 1 GeV in 3 cm using a plasma channel at low density. This demonstrates the production of GeV beams from devices much smaller than conventional linacs, and confirms the anticipated scaling of laser driven accelerators to GeV energies. Stable performance at 0.5 GeV was demonstrated. Experiments and simulations are in progress to control injection of particles into the wake and hence to improve beam quality and stability. Using plasma density gradients to control injection, stable beams at 1 MeV over days of operation, and with an order of magnitude lower absolute momentum spread than previously observed, have been demonstrated. New experiments are post-accelerating the beams from controlled injection experiments to increase beam quality and stability. Thomson scattering from such beams is being developed to provide collimated multi-MeV monoenergetic gamma sources for security applications from compact devices. Such sources can reduce dose to target and increase accuracy for applications including photofission and nuclear resonance fluorescence
Development of high gradient laser wakefield accelerators towards nuclear detection applications at LBNL
Compact high-energy linacs are important to applications including monochromatic gamma sources for nuclear material security applications. Recent laser wakefield accelerator experiments at LBNL demonstrated narrow energy spread beams, now with energies of up to 1 GeV in 3 cm using a plasma channel at low density. This demonstrates the production of GeV beams from devices much smaller than conventional linacs, and confirms the anticipated scaling of laser driven accelerators to GeV energies. Stable performance at 0.5 GeV was demonstrated. Experiments and simulations are in progress to control injection of particles into the wake and hence to improve beam quality and stability. Using plasma density gradients to control injection, stable beams at 1 MeV over days of operation, and with an order of magnitude lower absolute momentum spread than previously observed, have been demonstrated. New experiments are post-accelerating the beams from controlled injection experiments to increase beam quality and stability. Thomson scattering from such beams is being developed to provide collimated multi-MeV monoenergetic gamma sources for security applications from compact devices. Such sources can reduce dose to target and increase accuracy for applications including photofission and nuclear resonance fluorescence
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White Paper on DOE-HEP Accelerator Modeling Science Activities
Toward the goal of maximizing the impact of computer modeling on the design
of future particle accelerators and the development of new accelerator
techniques & technologies, this white paper presents the rationale for: (a)
strengthening and expanding programmatic activities in accelerator modeling
science within the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of High Energy Physics
(HEP) and (b) increasing the community-wide coordination and integration of
code development
White Paper on DOE-HEP Accelerator Modeling Science Activities
Toward the goal of maximizing the impact of computer modeling on the design
of future particle accelerators and the development of new accelerator
techniques & technologies, this white paper presents the rationale for: (a)
strengthening and expanding programmatic activities in accelerator modeling
science within the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of High Energy Physics
(HEP) and (b) increasing the community-wide coordination and integration of
code development
Effect of Nozzle Curvature on Supersonic Gas Jets Used in Laser-Plasma Acceleration
Supersonic gas jets produced by converging-diverging (C-D) nozzles are
commonly used as targets for laser-plasma acceleration (LPA) experiments. A
major point of interest for these targets is the gas density at the region of
interaction where the laser ionizes the gas plume to create a plasma, providing
the acceleration structure. Tuning the density profiles at this interaction
region is crucial to LPA optimization. A "flat-top" density profile is desired
at this line of interaction to control laser propagation and high energy
electron acceleration, while a short high-density profile is often preferred
for acceleration of lower-energy tightly-focused laser-plasma interactions. A
particular design parameter of interest is the curvature of the nozzle's
diverging section. We examine three nozzle designs with different curvatures:
the concave "bell", straight conical and convex "trumpet" nozzles. We
demonstrate that, at mm-scale distances from the nozzle exit, the trumpet and
straight nozzles, if optimized, produce "flat-top" density profiles whereas the
bell nozzle creates focused regions of gas with higher densities. An
optimization procedure for the trumpet nozzle is derived and compared to the
straight nozzle optimization process. We find that the trumpet nozzle, by
providing an extra parameter of control through its curvature, is more
versatile for creating flat-top profiles and its optimization procedure is more
refined compared to the straight nozzle and the straight nozzle optimization
process. We present results for different nozzle designs from computational
fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations performed with the program ANSYS Fluent and
verify them experimentally using neutral density interferometry
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Online charge measurement for petawatt laser-driven ion acceleration
Laser-driven ion beams have gained considerable attention for their potential use in multidisciplinary research and technology. Preclinical studies into their radiobiological effectiveness have established the prospect of using laser-driven ion beams for radiotherapy. In particular, research into the beneficial effects of ultrahigh instantaneous dose rates is enabled by the high ion bunch charge and uniquely short bunch lengths present for laser-driven ion beams. Such studies require reliable, online dosimetry methods to monitor the bunch charge for every laser shot to ensure that the prescribed dose is accurately applied to the biological sample. In this paper, we present the first successful use of an Integrating Current Transformer (ICT) for laser-driven ion accelerators. This is a noninvasive diagnostic to measure the charge of the accelerated ion bunch. It enables online estimates of the applied dose in radiobiological experiments and facilitates ion beam tuning, in particular, optimization of the laser ion source, and alignment of the proton transport beamline. We present the ICT implementation and the correlation with other diagnostics, such as radiochromic films, a Thomson parabola spectrometer, and a scintillator
A new platform for ultra-high dose rate radiobiological research using the BELLA PW laser proton beamline.
Radiotherapy is the current standard of care for more than 50% of all cancer patients. Improvements in radiotherapy (RT) technology have increased tumor targeting and normal tissue sparing. Radiations at ultra-high dose rates required for FLASH-RT effects have sparked interest in potentially providing additional differential therapeutic benefits. We present a new experimental platform that is the first one to deliver petawatt laser-driven proton pulses of 2 MeV energy at 0.2 Hz repetition rate by means of a compact, tunable active plasma lens beamline to biological samples. Cell monolayers grown over a 10 mm diameter field were exposed to clinically relevant proton doses ranging from 7 to 35 Gy at ultra-high instantaneous dose rates of 107 Gy/s. Dose-dependent cell survival measurements of human normal and tumor cells exposed to LD protons showed significantly higher cell survival of normal-cells compared to tumor-cells for total doses of 7 Gy and higher, which was not observed to the same extent for X-ray reference irradiations at clinical dose rates. These findings provide preliminary evidence that compact LD proton sources enable a new and promising platform for investigating the physical, chemical and biological mechanisms underlying the FLASH effect
Electroweak parameters of the z0 resonance and the standard model
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