Publication | Open Access
The acceleration of a high-charge electron bunch to 10 GeV in a 10-cm nanoparticle-assisted wakefield accelerator
75
Citations
34
References
2023
Year
EngineeringNonlinear Plasma WavesLaser-plasma InteractionRelativistic PlasmaLaser Plasma PhysicPlasma PhysicsHigh-energy AcceleratorsAccelerator PhysicHigh-power LasersAccelerator PhysicsLaser Plasma PhysicsAccelerator TechnologyPhysicsEnergy SpreadLaser Wakefield AcceleratorParticle Beam PhysicsParticle AcceleratorsApplied PhysicsParticle AcceleratorHigh-charge Electron Bunch
An intense laser pulse focused onto a plasma can excite nonlinear plasma waves. Under appropriate conditions, electrons from the background plasma are trapped in the plasma wave and accelerated to ultra-relativistic velocities. This scheme is called a laser wakefield accelerator. In this work, we present results from a laser wakefield acceleration experiment using a petawatt-class laser to excite the wakefields as well as nanoparticles to assist the injection of electrons into the accelerating phase of the wakefields. We find that a 10-cm-long, nanoparticle-assisted laser wakefield accelerator can generate 340 pC, 10 ± 1.86 GeV electron bunches with a 3.4 GeV rms convolved energy spread and a 0.9 mrad rms divergence. It can also produce bunches with lower energies in the 4–6 GeV range.
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