| Literature DB >> 29348511 |
A Curcio1,2, A Marocchino1,2, V Dolci1,3, S Lupi3,4, M Petrarca5,6.
Abstract
In this paper, an alternative perspective for the generation of millimetric high-gradient resonant plasma waves is discussed. This method is based on the plasma-wave excitation by energetic single-cycle THz pulses whose temporal length is comparable to the plasma wavelength. The excitation regime discussed in this paper is the quasi-nonlinear regime that can be achieved when the normalized vector potential of the driving THz pulse is on the order of unity. To investigate this regime and determine the strength of the excited electric fields, a Particle-In-Cell (PIC) code has been used. It has been found that by exploiting THz pulses with characteristics currently available in laboratory, longitudinal electron plasma waves with electric gradients up to hundreds MV/m can be obtained. The mm-size nature of the resonant plasma wave can be of great utility for an acceleration scheme in which high-brightness electron bunches are injected into the wave to undergo a strong acceleration. The long-size nature of the acceleration bucket with respect to the short length of the electron bunches can be handled in a more robust manner in comparison with the case when micrometric waves are employed.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29348511 PMCID: PMC5773702 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-18312-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Axial electric field E driven by a THz pulse located in the region −2 L < ξ < 0 (the pulse is moving to the right) for different values of a0, where λ = 1 mm (n0 = 1 × 1015 cm−3 plasma density), L = 105 μm.
Figure 22D map of the total longitudinal electric field for the input parameters a0 = 0.2, λ = 1 mm (n0 = 1 × 1015 cm−3), and L = 105 μm. Starting from right: fast field component oscillating at twice the frequency of the THz driver followed by the generated electron plasma wakefield after 2.5 mm of propagation inside the plasma. The axial wakefield lineout is also shown in violet, with a peak amplitude of 16 MV/m for a0 = 0.2.
Figure 3Peak electric field versus the THz pulse length for a fixed background electron plasma density of n0 = 1015 cm−3. The red points represent the peak value of the wakefield simulated with the PIC code for different choices of the THz pulse length driving the electron plasma wave.
Figure 4Peak electric field versus the background electron plasma density for a fixed THz pulse length of L = 105 μm. The points represent the peak value of the wakefield simulated with the PIC code for different choices of initial background electron plasma density.
Figure 5Normalized amplitude of the axial wakefield excited by single cycle THz pulses versus the parameter kL (i.e. for any choice of background electron plasma density and THz pulse length). Normalizing amplitude: . Blue line: interpolation.
Main characteristics of THz and IR radiation.
| λ [ | w0 [ | z | |
|---|---|---|---|
| THz | 100 | 200 | 1.3 |
| IR | 0.8 | 20 | 1.6 |