2006 48th Annual Meeting of the Division of Plasma Physics
Monday–Friday, October 30–November 3 2006;
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Session UI2: Advances in Laser and Plasma Based Accelerators
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Thursday, November 2, 2006
Philadelphia Marriott Downtown
Room: Grand Salon CDE
Chair: Warren Mori, University of California, Los Angeles
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.DPP.UI2.5
Abstract: UI2.00005 : Developing high energy, stable laser wakefield accelerators: particle simulations and experiments
11:30 AM–12:00 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Cameron Geddes
(LBNL)
Laser driven wakefield accelerators produce accelerating fields
thousands of times those achievable in conventional
radiofrequency accelerators, and recent experiments have produced
high energy electron bunches with low emittance and energy
spread. Challenges now include control and reproducibility of the
electron beam, further improvements in energy spread, and scaling
to higher energies. We present large-scale particle in cell
simulations together with recent experiments towards these goals.
In LBNL experiments the relativistically intense drive pulse
was guided over more than 10 diffraction ranges by plasma channels.
Guiding beyond the diffraction range improved efficiency by
allowing use of a smaller laser spot size (and hence higher
intensities) over long propagation distances. At a drive pulse
power of 9 TW, electrons were trapped from the plasma and beams
of percent energy spread containing $>$ 200pC charge above 80 MeV
with normalized emittance estimated at $<$ 2 $\pi$-mm-mrad were
produced. Energies have now been scaled to 1 GeV using 40 TW of
laser power. Particle simulations and data showed that the high
quality bunch in recent experiments was formed when beam loading
turned off injection after initial self trapping, creating a
bunch of electrons isolated in phase space. A narrow energy
spread beam was then obtained by extracting the bunch as it
outran the accelerating phase of the wake. Large scale
simulations coupled with experiments are now under way to better
understand the optimization of such accelerators including
production of reproducible electron beams and scaling to energies
beyond a GeV. Numerical resolution and two and three dimensional
effects are discussed as well as diagnostics for application of
the simulations to experiments. Effects including injection and
beam dynamics as well as pump laser depletion and reshaping will
be described, with application to design of future experiments.
Supported by DOE grant DE-AC02-05CH11231 and by an INCITE
computational award.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.DPP.UI2.5