| Literature DB >> 16437110 |
H Schwoerer1, S Pfotenhauer, O Jäckel, K-U Amthor, B Liesfeld, W Ziegler, R Sauerbrey, K W D Ledingham, T Esirkepov.
Abstract
Particle acceleration based on high intensity laser systems (a process known as laser-plasma acceleration) has achieved high quality particle beams that compare favourably with conventional acceleration techniques in terms of emittance, brightness and pulse duration. A long-term difficulty associated with laser-plasma acceleration--the very broad, exponential energy spectrum of the emitted particles--has been overcome recently for electron beams. Here we report analogous results for ions, specifically the production of quasi-monoenergetic proton beams using laser-plasma accelerators. Reliable and reproducible laser-accelerated ion beams were achieved by intense laser irradiation of solid microstructured targets. This proof-of-principle experiment serves to illuminate the role of laser-generated plasmas as feasible particle sources. Scalability studies show that, owing to their compact size and reasonable cost, such table-top laser systems with high repetition rates could contribute to the development of new generations of particle injectors that may be suitable for medical proton therapy.Year: 2006 PMID: 16437110 DOI: 10.1038/nature04492
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962