Laser-driven accelerators, in which particles are accelerated by the electric field of a plasma wave (the wakefield) driven by an intense laser, have demonstrated accelerating electric fields of hundreds of GV m(-1) (refs 1-3). These fields are thousands of times greater than those achievable in conventional radio-frequency accelerators, spurring interest in laser accelerators as compact next-generation sources of energetic electrons and radiation. To date, however, acceleration distances have been severely limited by the lack of a controllable method for extending the propagation distance of the focused laser pulse. The ensuing short acceleration distance results in low-energy beams with 100 per cent electron energy spread, which limits potential applications. Here we demonstrate a laser accelerator that produces electron beams with an energy spread of a few per cent, low emittance and increased energy (more than 10(9) electrons above 80 MeV). Our technique involves the use of a preformed plasma density channel to guide a relativistically intense laser, resulting in a longer propagation distance. The results open the way for compact and tunable high-brightness sources of electrons and radiation.
Plasma density gradients in a gas jet were used to control the wake phase velocity and trapping threshold in a laser wakefield accelerator, producing stable electron bunches with longitudinal and transverse momentum spreads more than ten times lower than in previous experiments (0.17 and 0.02 MeV/c FWHM, respectively) and with central momenta of 0.76 ± 0.02 MeV/c. Transition radiation measurements combined with simulations indicated that the bunches can be used as a wakefield accelerator injector to produce stable beams with 0.2 MeV/c-class momentum spread at high energies.
Laser plasma accelerators 1 have produced high-quality electron beams with GeV energies from cm-scale devices 2 and are being investigated as hyperspectral fs light sources producing THz to γ-ray radiation 3-5 , and as drivers for future highenergy colliders 6,7 . These applications require a high degree of stability, beam quality and tunability. Here we report on a technique to inject electrons into the accelerating field of a laser-driven plasma wave and coupling of this injector to a lower-density, separately tunable plasma for further acceleration. The technique relies on a single laser pulse powering a plasma structure with a tailored longitudinal density profile, to produce beams that can be tuned in the range of 100-400 MeV with per-cent-level stability, using laser pulses of less than 40 TW. The resulting device is a simple stand-alone accelerator or the front end for a multistage higher-energy accelerator.Producing high-quality electron beams from an accelerator requires electron injection into the accelerating field to be localized in time and space. For laser plasma accelerators (LPAs) that rely on homogeneous plasmas driven with single laser pulses, continuous injection can occur when driving large-amplitude plasma waves (wakefields), resulting in large energy spread. Lower energy spread can be achieved through termination of injection by operating near the injection threshold or by injecting enough charge to suppress the wake amplitude (that is, beam loading). Subsequent termination of the accelerating process at dephasing (that is, when electrons are starting to outrun the accelerating wave) minimizes energy spread. These mechanisms have produced per-cent-level energy-spread beams 2,8-10 , but small changes in parameters can result in large changes in beam quality. As a result, tunability has been limited, necessitating the development of a simple, robust and controlled injection technique combined with an independently controllable accelerating stage.In general, injection of electrons into a plasma wave occurs when the velocity of background electrons approaches the wake phase velocity. Laser-based methods for boosting the electron velocity have been proposed 11,12 and implemented 13,14 to achieve tunable electron beams, but require sophisticated alignment and synchronization of the multiple laser pulses. Injection can also be triggered by introducing electrons into the correct phase of the wake through ionization 15 , but so far the technique has resulted in broad energy-spread beams with high divergence 16,17 . A different approach, that relies on a single laser pulse for powering the LPA, is to momentarily slow down the wake phase velocity to facilitate trapping 18 . The control of the wake phase velocity can be achieved by tailoring the nonlinear plasma wavelength λ p (z) along the longitudinal coordinate z, through control of the electron density n e and the laser parameters. Specifically, λ p (z) = λ p0 (z)F , where the linear plasma wavelength λ p0 (µm) ≈ 3.3 × 10 10 / √ n e (cm −3 ) and F ...
Ionization injection in a laser-plasma accelerator is studied analytically and by multi-dimensional particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations. To enable the production of low energy spread beams, we consider a short region containing a high atomic number gas (e.g., nitrogen) for ionization-induced trapping, followed by a longer region using a low atomic number gas (e.g., hydrogen), that is, free of additional trapping, for post acceleration. For a broad laser pulse, ionization injection requires a minimum normalized laser field of a0≃1.7, assuming a resonant Gaussian laser pulse. Effects of gas mix parameters, including species, concentration, and length of the mixture region, on the final electron injection number and beam quality are studied. The minimum energy spread is determined by the spread in initial ionized phases of the electrons in the wakefield due to the tunneling ionization process within the laser pulse. Laser polarization and intensity effects on injection number and final electron emittance are examined. Two-dimensional PIC simulations are used to study the ionization injection process and the transverse beam structure. With proper laser-plasma parameters, mono-energetic electron beams with 10 pC charge, a central energy at GeV level, and energy spread less than 1% can be produced in a mixed gas with ionized electron density of 1018cm-3. Lower density can give a higher final accelerated beam energy and reduce the final relative energy spread even further.
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