| Literature DB >> 29079817 |
A Doche1, C Beekman2, S Corde3, J M Allen4, C I Clarke4, J Frederico4, S J Gessner4, S Z Green4, M J Hogan4, B O'Shea4, V Yakimenko4, W An5, C E Clayton5, C Joshi5, K A Marsh5, W B Mori5, N Vafaei-Najafabadi5, M D Litos6, E Adli7, C A Lindstrøm7, W Lu8.
Abstract
High gradients of energy gain and high energy efficiency are necessary parameters for compact, cost-efficient and high-energy particle colliders. Plasma Wakefield Accelerators (PWFA) offer both, making them attractive candidates for next-generation colliders. In these devices, a charge-density plasma wave is excited by an ultra-relativistic bunch of charged particles (the drive bunch). The energy in the wave can be extracted by a second bunch (the trailing bunch), as this bunch propagates in the wake of the drive bunch. While a trailing electron bunch was accelerated in a plasma with more than a gigaelectronvolt of energy gain, accelerating a trailing positron bunch in a plasma is much more challenging as the plasma response can be asymmetric for positrons and electrons. We report the demonstration of the energy gain by a distinct trailing positron bunch in a plasma wakefield accelerator, spanning nonlinear to quasi-linear regimes, and unveil the beam loading process underlying the accelerator energy efficiency. A positron bunch is used to drive the plasma wake in the experiment, though the quasi-linear wake structure could as easily be formed by an electron bunch or a laser driver. The results thus mark the first acceleration of a distinct positron bunch in plasma-based particle accelerators.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29079817 PMCID: PMC5660186 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-14524-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Experimental set-up. An intense laser is focused by an axicon in a lithium oven, and creates a uniform plasma by ionization of the first electron of lithium. Two positron bunches, a drive bunch at a central energy of 20.55 GeV, and a trailing bunch at a central energy of 20.05 GeV about 100 μm behind, are sent into the plasma. An electro-optic sampler (EOS) and a titanium wedge can be inserted in the beamline. A Cherenkov imaging spectrometer is set up to measure the energy spectrum of the positrons after the interaction with the plasma.
Figure 2Evidence of acceleration of a positron bunch. Positron energy spectra measured by the Cherenkov energy spectrometer with (red solid line) and without plasma (ionizing laser off, blue dash-dotted line). In (a) only the drive bunch is sent, in (b) only the trailing bunch is sent, and in (c) both the drive and the trailing bunches are sent through the lithium oven, in which case the trailing bunch is accelerated from 20.05 GeV to above 21 GeV by the plasma wake. The plasma data is multiplied by 4.5 in (a–c). The spectrum c with plasma is one of the 160 spectra from the dataset used in Fig. 3.
Figure 3Energy spectra and evidence for the beam-loading phenomenon. (a) A stack of 160 energy spectra of the positron bunches measured after interaction with the plasma. Each horizontal line represents a single spectrum (see the comments on Fig. 2c). The shots are sorted by increasing trailing bunch charge (black line). The color axis represents the spectral charge density in pC GeV−1. (b) Energy of the accelerated peak as a function of the trailing bunch charge. (c) The r.m.s. energy spread of the accelerated peak (obtained from the asymmetric Gaussian fit) as a function of the trailing bunch charge.
Figure 4Simulated nonlinear and quasi-linear wakefields, and maximum energy. (a,b) Longitudinal electric field Ez in the plasma wake for the low emittance case (no titanium) with x and y emittances of 100 μm × 10 μm (a) and for the high emittance case (297 μm of titanium) with x and y emittances of 270 μm × 60 μm (b). (c,d) Transverse force Fx e(Ex − cBy) experienced by the positrons in the plasma wake for the low emittance case (c) and for the high emittance case (d). e, Maximum energy (defined as the energy where the accelerated spectrum crosses the 10 pC GeV−1 threshold) as a function of the titanium thickness, in the experiment and in simulations. As the most important error on the maximum energy arises from the sensitivity to the threshold, the error bars depict the effect of multiplying and dividing the threshold by 1.5. In (a–d) x is the transverse coordinate, ξ = z − ct is the dimension parallel to motion, and the bunches are propagating to the right (direction indicated by the black arrows). Black dashed lines represent the current profile and depict the positions of the drive (D) and trailing (T) bunches in the wakefield.