Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS April Meeting 2022
Volume 67, Number 6
Saturday–Tuesday, April 9–12, 2022; New York
Session H07: Extreme Light-matter Interactions for Exploring Fundamental Physics
10:45 AM–12:33 PM,
Sunday, April 10, 2022
Room: Salon 4
Sponsoring
Unit:
DAMOP
Chair: Derek Jackson Kimball, California State University - East Bay
Abstract: H07.00002 : Development of x-ray sources driven by laser wavefield acceleration at LaserNetUS facilities
11:21 AM–11:57 AM
Presenter:
Felicie Albert
(Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab)
Author:
Felicie Albert
(Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab)
Collaboration:
Work performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
under contract DE-AC52-07NA27344, supported by the LLNL LDRD program under tracking code 13-LW-076, 16-
ERD-02
This presentation will review particle acceleration in laser-driven plasmas as an alternative to generate x-rays, and in particular present some experiments at LaserNetUS facilities, a consortium of 10 high power lasers in America. A plasma is an ionized medium that can sustain electrical fields many orders of magnitude higher than that in conventional radiofrequency accelerator structures. When short, intense laser pulses are focused into a gas, it produces electron plasma waves in which electrons can be trapped and accelerated to GeV energies. This process, laser-wakefield acceleration (LWFA), is analogous to a surfer being propelled by an ocean wave. Betatron x-ray radiation, driven by electrons from laser-wakefield acceleration, has unique properties that are analogous to synchrotron radiation, with a 1000-fold shorter pulse. This source is produced when relativistic electrons oscillate during the LWFA process. An important use of x-rays from laser plasma accelerators we will discuss is in High Energy Density (HED) science. This field uses large laser and x-ray free electron laser facilities to create in the laboratory extreme conditions of temperatures and pressures that are usually found in the interiors of stars and planets.
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