Electron energy increase in a laser wakefield accelerator using up-ramp plasma density profiles

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Abstract

The phase velocity of the wakefield of a laser wakefield accelerator can, theoretically, be manipulated by shaping the longitudinal plasma density profile, thus controlling the parameters of the generated electron beam. We present an experimental method where using a series of shaped longitudinal plasma density profiles we increased the mean electron peak energy more than 50%, from 175 ± 1 MeV to 262 ± 10 MeV and the maximum peak energy from 182 MeV to 363 MeV. The divergence follows closely the change of mean energy and decreases from 58.9 ± 0.45 mrad to 12.6 ± 1.2 mrad along the horizontal axis and from 35 ± 0.3 mrad to 8.3 ± 0.69 mrad along the vertical axis. Particle-in-cell simulations show that a ramp in a plasma density profile can affect the evolution of the wakefield, thus qualitatively confirming the experimental results. The presented method can increase the electron energy for a fixed laser power and at the same time offer an energy tunable source of electrons.

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Aniculaesei, C., Pathak, V. B., Kim, H. T., Oh, K. H., Yoo, B. J., Brunetti, E., … Nam, C. H. (2019). Electron energy increase in a laser wakefield accelerator using up-ramp plasma density profiles. Scientific Reports, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-47677-5

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