학술논문

Three-dimensional simulation of KeV photon laser operation using GeV ultra short laser-generated electron bunches
Document Type
Conference
Source
2008 IEEE 35th International Conference on Plasma Science Plasma Science, 2008. ICOPS 2008. IEEE 35th International Conference on. :1-1 Jun, 2008
Subject
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Nuclear Engineering
Solid modeling
Free electron lasers
Undulators
Acceleration
Physics
Photonics
Computational modeling
Language
ISSN
0730-9244
Abstract
Summary form only given. The recent discovery of electron bunch acceleration to GeV energies using ultra-short laser pulses propagating through centimeter-scale plasmas has stimulated interest in the use of these "mono-energetic" electron bunches to drive self-amplified spontaneous emission (SASE) free-electron lasers (FELs). Theoretically, one can generate 0.1-1 keV coherent FEL photon pulses provided an electron bunch having high peak current, concomitant with low emittance and energy spread, can be achieved and successfully injected into the FEL wiggler. We have simulated the bubble acceleration of electrons using the 3-D particle-in-cell (PIC) code VPIC. The VPIC code has recently been optimized for the Roadrunner computer platform3 facilitating simulation of the entire acceleration process in the laboratory frame in 3-D. The electron distribution from these VPIC simulations is used as input for the 3-D FEL code FELEX4 to calculate the self-consistent growth from spontaneous emission of the 0.1 -1 keV photon pulse produced in the wiggler. FELEX models the interaction of the electron pulse with the optical pulse including the transverse dependences of the wiggler field (including wiggler field errors, if desired), and the transverse fall off of the electron density and optical field intensity. Examples of these simulation will be shown including the effects of electron beam quality on FEL extraction efficiency. These calculations provide an initial estimate of the specifications for both the electron acceleration quality and the FEL wiggler design parameters.