2005 47th Annual Meeting of the Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 24–28, 2005;
Denver, Colorado
Session AR1: Plasma Acclerators Race to 10 GeV and Beyond
8:00 AM–9:00 AM,
Monday, October 24, 2005
Adam's Mark Hotel
Room: Plaza Ballroom ABC
Chair: Vincent Chan, General Atomics
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.DPP.AR1.1
Abstract: AR1.00001 : Plasma Accelerators Race to 10 GeV and Beyond
8:00 AM–9:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Author:
Tom Katsouleas
(University of Southern California)
This paper reviews the concepts, recent progress and current
challenges for
realizing the tremendous electric fields in relativistic plasma
waves for
applications ranging from tabletop particle accelerators to
high-energy
physics. Experiments in the 90's on laser-driven plasma wakefield
accelerators at several laboratories around the world
demonstrated the
potential for plasma wakefields to accelerate intense bunches of
self-trapped particles at rates as high as 100 GeV/m in mm-scale
gas jets.
These early experiments offered impressive gradients but large
energy spread
(100{\%}) and short interaction lengths. Major breakthroughs have
recently
occurred on both fronts. Three groups (LBL-US, LOA-France and
RAL-UK) have
now entered a new regime of laser wakefield acceleration
resulting in 100
MeV mono-energetic beams with up to nanoCoulombs of charge and
very small
angular spread. Simulations suggest that current lasers are just
entering
this new regime, and the scaling to higher energies appears
attractive. In
parallel with the progress in laser-driven wakefields,
particle-beam driven
wakefield accelerators are making large strides. A series of
experiments
using the 30 GeV beam of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center
(SLAC) has
demonstrated high-gradient acceleration of electrons and
positrons in
meter-scale plasmas. The UCLA/USC/SLAC collaboration has accelerated
electrons beyond 1 GeV and is aiming at 10 GeV in 30 cm as the
next step
toward a ``plasma afterburner,'' a concept for doubling the
energy of a
high-energy collider in a few tens of meters of plasma. In
addition to
wakefield acceleration, these and other experiments have
demonstrated the
rich physics bounty to be reaped from relativistic beam-plasma
interactions.
This includes plasma lenses capable of focusing particle beams to
the
highest density ever produced, collective radiation mechanisms
capable of
generating high-brightness x-ray beams, collective refraction of
particles
at a plasma interface, and acceleration of intense proton beams from
laser-irradiated foils.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.DPP.AR1.1