| Literature DB >> 27312720 |
S Corde1, E Adli2, J M Allen3, W An4,5, C I Clarke3, B Clausse3, C E Clayton4, J P Delahaye3, J Frederico3, S Gessner3, S Z Green3, M J Hogan3, C Joshi4, M Litos3, W Lu6, K A Marsh4, W B Mori4,5, N Vafaei-Najafabadi4, D Walz3, V Yakimenko3.
Abstract
Plasma accelerators driven by particle beams are a very promising future accelerator technology as they can sustain high accelerating fields over long distances with high energy efficiency. They rely on the excitation of a plasma wave in the wake of a drive beam. To generate the plasma, a neutral gas can be field-ionized by the head of the drive beam, in which case the distance of acceleration and energy gain can be strongly limited by head erosion. Here we overcome this limit and demonstrate that electrons in the tail of a drive beam can be accelerated by up to 27 GeV in a high-ionization-potential gas (argon), boosting their initial 20.35 GeV energy by 130%. Particle-in-cell simulations show that the argon plasma is sustaining very high electric fields, of ∼150 GV m(-1), over ∼20 cm. The results open new possibilities for the design of particle beam drivers and plasma sources.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27312720 PMCID: PMC4915014 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms11898
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the experimental setup.
The FACET electron beam is focused by final focus quadrupoles inside a volume filled with argon gas and contained by two beryllium windows. After interacting with the plasma, electrons are transported by a quadrupole doublet towards the beam dump and deflected vertically by a dipole magnet. A Cherenkov detector is used to measure the electron energy spectrum (see the Methods for details).
Figure 2Electron energy spectra.
(a) Single shot image of the electron energy spectrum measured by the Cherenkov detector (see the Methods for details). (b) Projection of the image (a) on the electron energy axis, showing a maximum energy at 47±2.5 GeV. The horizontal error bar accounts for resolution limit due to finite beam size and for error due to pointing fluctuations, and the grey area indicates the detection threshold. (c) Waterfall plot showing the peak charge density as a function of electron energy for 50 consecutive electron bunches.
Figure 3Energy gain as a function of argon pressure.
Waterfall plots of peak charge density as a function of electron energy for an argon pressure of 2 Torr (a), 4 Torr (b), 8 Torr (c), 16 Torr (d) and 32 Torr (e). Each waterfall plot shows 50 consecutive shots taken under the same experimental conditions (except for e, where only 40 shots are presented).
Figure 4QuickPIC simulation at P=16 Torr.
Simulated beam electron density (a), plasma electron density (b) and longitudinal electric field E (c) at z=0, the location where the beam reaches its minimum transverse size in vacuum. (d) Evolution of the x and y beam sizes (r.m.s. values with 10% cut) of a slice of the bunch located at ξ=z−ct=−10 μm for propagation through a plasma (solid lines) and for propagation in vacuum (dashed lines). This slice is inside the blowout region when plasma is present. (e) Evolution of the longitudinal on-axis electric field E during beam propagation through the argon gas volume. The three different regions are described in the text.
Figure 5Energy gain and loss in simulations.
The red triangles (blue squares) represent the maximum energy gain (maximum energy loss) observed at the end of the beam-plasma interaction in QuickPIC simulations (see the Methods for details) for different argon pressures. The magenta circle and its error bar represent the experimental average maximum energy gain corresponding to the data of Fig. 2 and its s.e.m.