Abstract
Laser-plasma accelerators of only a centimetre's length have produced nearly monoenergetic electron bunches with energy as high as 1 GeV. Scaling these compact accelerators to multi-gigaelectronvolt energy would open the prospect of building X-ray free-electron lasers and linear colliders hundreds of times smaller than conventional facilities, but the 1 GeV barrier has so far proven insurmountable. Here, by applying new petawatt laser technology, we produce electron bunches with a spectrum prominently peaked at 2 GeV with only a few per cent energy spread and unprecedented sub-milliradian divergence. Petawatt pulses inject ambient plasma electrons into the laser-driven accelerator at much lower density than was previously possible, thereby overcoming the principal physical barriers to multi-gigaelectronvolt acceleration: dephasing between laser-driven wake and accelerating electrons and laser pulse erosion. Simulations indicate that with improvements in the laser-pulse focus quality, acceleration to nearly 10 GeV should be possible with the available pulse energy. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Wang, X., Zgadzaj, R., Fazel, N., Li, Z., Yi, S. A., Zhang, X., … Downer, M. C. (2013). Quasi-monoenergetic laser-plasma acceleration of electrons to 2 GeV. Nature Communications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms2988
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