62nd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 65, Number 11
Monday–Friday, November 9–13, 2020;
Remote; Time Zone: Central Standard Time, USA
Session NI01: Invited: Laser Wakefield Acceleration (LWFA)
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Wednesday, November 11, 2020
Chair: Michael Downer, University of Texas at Austin
Abstract: NI01.00002 : Optimization of Electron Injection and Stable Long-Term Operation of a kHz Laser-Plasma Accelerator
10:00 AM–10:30 AM
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Abstract
Author:
Jerome Faure
(LOA, CNRS-ENSTA-Ecole Polytechnique)
High-repetition rate laser-plasma accelerators (LPA) have great potential
for applications in femtosecond irradiation, X-ray generation and electron
diffraction. As relativistic laser intensities are now available at
kilohertz, important progress has been achieved in high-repetition rate LPA
in the past few years [1] Here, we will review recent experimental results
and developments on a kHz LPA. Our laser system is equipped with a
post-compression stage which gives us a unique opportunity to tune the
spectral bandwidth, thereby generating chirp-free laser pulses ranging from
3.5-fs to 25-fs. This allowed us to study the effect of the number of
optical cycles in the acceleration process. In the few cycle regime, we
observe a transition from resonant to self-modulated laser wakefield
acceleration when the number of cycles N is increased from N$=$1 to N$=$3.
We observe that the best beam quality is obtained for near single-cycle
laser pulses in the resonant regime. In order to further optimize our
laser-plasma accelerator, several injection mechanisms were studied as well
as their impact on the performance and stability of the accelerator. Density
gradient injection was found to yield the most stable electron beams and we
demonstrated stable continuous operation for a period of 5 hours [2].
Electron bunches with 2.6 pC charge and 2.5 MeV peak energy were generated
via injection and trapping in a downward plasma density ramp. This density
transition was produced in a specially designed asymmetric shocked gas jet.
The reproducibility of the electron source was also assessed over a period
of a week and found to be satisfactory with similar values of the beam
charge and energy. Particle in cell simulations confirm the role of the
shock and the density transition in the electron injection mechanism.
References:
[1] D. Guenot et al., Nat. Photonics \textbf{11}, 293 (2017). F. Salehi et
al., Opt. Lett. \textbf{42}, 2015 (2017)
[2] L. Rovige et al., ArXiV~:2005.06929 (2020)