Bulletin of the American Physical Society
60th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 63, Number 11
Monday–Friday, November 5–9, 2018; Portland, Oregon
Session CO7: Relativistic Laser Plasma Interaction and Particles (ions, electrons, positrons, neutrons) I
2:00 PM–4:48 PM,
Monday, November 5, 2018
OCC
Room: B117-119
Chair: Marija Vranic, Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade de Lisboa
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.DPP.CO7.6
Abstract: CO7.00006 : Onset of electron-positron pair cascades in the collision of tightly focused 10 GeV-class lepton beams
3:00 PM–3:12 PM
Presenter:
Dario Del Sorbo
(SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab, SLAC)
Authors:
Dario Del Sorbo
(SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab, SLAC)
Fabrizio Del Gaudio
(GoLP/IPFN, Instituto Superior Tecnico, Lisbon, Portugal)
Thomas Grismayer
(GoLP/IPFN, Instituto Superior Tecnico, Lisbon, Portugal)
Eduardo Alves
(SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory)
Vitaly Yakimenko
(SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab)
Sebastian Meuren
(PPPL)
Luis O Silva
(GoLP/IPFN, Instituto Superior Tecnico, Lisbon, Portugal)
Warren B Mori
(Univ of California - Los Angeles)
Frederico Fiuza
(SLAC - Natl Accelerator Lab)
Electron-positron pair cascades develop in extreme astrophysical environments, such as pulsar magnetospheres, and are of fundamental interest in strong-field quantum electrodynamics. Recently, there has been a significant effort to infer the conditions for the onset of pair cascades in the laboratory, using ultra-intense laser fields, such as those soon to be available at multi-petawatt laser facilities.
Here, we explore the possibility of studying pair cascades in the collision of tightly focused lepton beams. When tightly compressed, these charged particle beams can possess electric fields with strengths comparable to multi-PW laser beams. As highly relativistic particles experience these extreme fields from the opposite beam they can produce copious amounts of high-energy radiation, which will in turn produce pairs (T. Grismayer et al, this conference), and give rise to a cascade. Expanding the work for low disruptions regimes (F. Del Gaudio et al., submitted), we discuss the optimal conditions to study this in the laboratory and the corresponding observables.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.DPP.CO7.6
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