All-optical control of nonlinear self-focusing of laser beams in plasma beat wave accelerators

POSTER

Abstract

The nonlinear focusing of a bi-color laser beam in tenuous plasmas can be all-optically enhanced or suppressed depending whether the beat wave frequency $\Omega$ is below or above the electron Langmuir frequency $\omega_p$. The driven electron density perturbation produces a co-moving index grating, which is focusing if $\Omega<\omega_p$ and de-focusing otherwise. Self-consistent guiding of a mildly over-critical long (many plasma periods) laser beam can be all-optically initiated by mixing with a second, much weaker, beam shifted in frequency by $\Omega>\omega_p$. The guiding effect initially owes to the de-focusing properties of the laser beat wave-driven 3D electron density perturbation. Electromagnetic cascading and resonant self-modulation contribute to the guiding process at propagation distances over one Rayleigh length. Acceleration in the non-resonant plasma beat wave yields quasi-monoenergetic bunched electron beams with the energy over a hundred MeV. In the case of $\Omega<\omega_p$, acceleration efficiency is generally higher because of nonlinear focusing enhanced by the plasma wave excitation. To achieve quasi-monoenergetic acceleration in this regime, electrons should be injected in the plasma wake at a distance from the plasma boundary.

*Supported by the U.S. D.O.E. grants DE-FG02-04ER54763, DE-FG02-04ER41321, DE-FG02-07ER54945, and by the NSF grant PHY-0114336.

Authors

  • Serguei Kalmykov

    • Institute for Fusion Studies, The University of Texas at Austin
    • Department of Physics and Institute for Fusion Studies, The University of Texas at Austin
  • S. Austin Yi

    • Institute for Fusion Studies, The University of Texas at Austin
    • Department of Physics and Institute for Fusion Studies, The University of Texas at Austin
  • Gennady Shvets

    • University of Texas
    • The University of Texas at Austin
    • Institute for Fusion Studies, The University of Texas at Austin
    • Department of Physics and Institute for Fusion Studies, The University of Texas at Austin