학술논문

Electron Self-Injection into an Evolving Plasma Bubble: The Way to a Dark Current Free GeV-Scale Laser Accelerator.
Document Type
Article
Source
AIP Conference Proceedings. 11/5/2010, Vol. 1299 Issue 1, p174-179. 6p.
Subject
*ELECTRON beams
*LASER-plasma interactions
*PLASMA accelerators
*ELECTRON distribution
*RADIATION pressure
*ULTRASHORT laser pulses
*PLASMA injection
*SIMULATION methods & models
*PHASE space
Language
ISSN
0094-243X
Abstract
A time-varying electron density bubble created by the radiation pressure of a tightly focused petawatt laser pulse traps electrons of ambient rarefied plasma and accelerates them to a GeV energy over a few-cm distance. Expansion of the bubble caused by the shape variation of the self-guided pulse is the primary cause of electron self-injection in strongly rarefied plasmas (ne∼1017 cm-3). Stabilization and contraction of the bubble extinguishes the injection. After the bubble stabilization, longitudinal non-uniformity of the accelerating gradient results in a rapid phase space rotation that produces a quasi-monoenergetic bunch well before the de-phasing limit. Combination of reduced and fully self-consistent (first-principle) 3-D PIC simulations complemented with the Hamiltonian diagnostics of electron phase space shows that the bubble dynamics and the self-injection process are governed primarily by the driver evolution; collective transverse fields of the trapped electron bunch reduce the accelerating gradient, slow down phase space rotation, and result in a formation of monoenergetic electron beam with higher energy than test-particle modeling predicts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]