Publication | Open Access
Production of high-quality electron bunches by dephasing and beam loading in channeled and unchanneled laser plasma accelerators
66
Citations
47
References
2005
Year
EngineeringPhysicsDephasing LengthLaser Plasma PhysicsRelativistic Laser-matter InteractionApplied PhysicsRelativistic PlasmaLaser Plasma PhysicLaser-plasma InteractionHigh-quality Electron BeamsCosmic RayHigh-quality Electron BunchesLaser Wakefield AcceleratorAccelerator PhysicBeam LoadingParticle AcceleratorAccelerator Technology
High-quality electron beams, with a few 109 electrons within a few percent of the same energy above 80 MeV, were produced in a laser wakefield accelerator by matching the acceleration length to the length over which electrons were accelerated and outran (dephased from) the wake. A plasma channel guided the drive laser over long distances, resulting in production of the high-energy, high-quality beams. Unchanneled experiments varying the length of the target plasma indicated that the high-quality bunches are produced near the dephasing length and demonstrated that channel guiding was more stable and efficient than relativistic self-guiding. Consistent with these data, particle-in-cell simulations indicate production of high-quality electron beams when trapping of an initial bunch of electrons suppresses further injection by loading the wake. The injected electron bunch is then compressed in energy by dephasing, when the front of the bunch begins to decelerate while the tail is still accelerated.
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