Laser wakefield acceleration using wire produced double density ramps

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Abstract

A novel approach to implement and control electron injection into the accelerating phase of a laser wakefield accelerator is presented. It utilizes a wire, which is introduced into the flow of a supersonic gas jet creating shock waves and three regions of differing plasma electron density. If tailored appropriately, the laser plasma interaction takes place in three stages: Laser self-compression, electron injection, and acceleration in the second plasma wave period. Compared to self-injection by wave breaking of a nonlinear plasma wave in a constant density plasma, this scheme increases beam charge by up to 1 order of magnitude in the quasimonoenergetic regime. Electron acceleration in the second plasma wave period reduces electron beam divergence by ≈25%, and the localized injection at the density downramps results in spectra with less than a few percent relative spread. © 2013. Published by the American Physical Society.

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APA

Burza, M., Gonoskov, A., Svensson, K., Wojda, F., Persson, A., Hansson, M., … Lundh, O. (2013). Laser wakefield acceleration using wire produced double density ramps. Physical Review Special Topics - Accelerators and Beams, 16(1). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.16.011301

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