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Quasi-monoenergetic laser-plasma acceleration of electrons to 2 GeV

Authors :
Chih-Hao Pai
W. Henderson
V. Khudik
Hernan Quevedo
Michael W Downer
Gilliss Dyer
Rafal Zgadzaj
N. Fazel
Todd Ditmire
Xiaoming Wang
Mikael Martinez
Y. Y. Chang
Aaron C Bernstein
Zhengyan Li
Gennady Shvets
R. Korzekwa
Hai-En Tsai
T. Borger
Erhard Gaul
M. Spinks
Xi Zhang
S. A. Yi
Michael E Donovan
Source :
Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2013.

Abstract

Laser-plasma accelerators of only a centimetre’s length have produced nearly monoenergetic electron bunches with energy as high as 1 GeV. Scaling these compact accelerators to multi-gigaelectronvolt energy would open the prospect of building X-ray free-electron lasers and linear colliders hundreds of times smaller than conventional facilities, but the 1 GeV barrier has so far proven insurmountable. Here, by applying new petawatt laser technology, we produce electron bunches with a spectrum prominently peaked at 2 GeV with only a few per cent energy spread and unprecedented sub-milliradian divergence. Petawatt pulses inject ambient plasma electrons into the laser-driven accelerator at much lower density than was previously possible, thereby overcoming the principal physical barriers to multi-gigaelectronvolt acceleration: dephasing between laser-driven wake and accelerating electrons and laser pulse erosion. Simulations indicate that with improvements in the laser-pulse focus quality, acceleration to nearly 10 GeV should be possible with the available pulse energy.<br />Laser-plasma accelerators can produce high-energy electron bunches over just a few centimetres of distance, offering possible table-top accelerator capabilities. Wang et al. break the current 1 GeV barrier by applying a petawatt laser to accelerate electrons nearly monoenergetically up to 2 GeV.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e283d1f3744e3106f2110ca532254a5b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms2988