Ultrahigh 6D-brightness electron beams for the light sources of the next generation

ORAL

Abstract

The plasma photocathode mechanism (aka Trojan Horse) enables a path towards electron beams with nm-level normalized emittance and kA range peak currents, hence ultrahigh 5D-brightness. This ultrahigh 5D-brightness beams hold great prospects to realize laboratory scale free-electron-lasers. However, the GV/m-accelerating gradient in plasma accelerators leads to substantial energy chirp and spread. The large energy spread is a major show-stopper towards key application such as the free-electron-laser. Here we present a novel method for energy chirp compensation which takes advantage of tailored beam loading due to a second ``escort'' bunch released via plasma photocathode. The escort bunch reverses the accelerating field locally at the trapping position of the ultrahigh 5D-brightness beam. This induces a counter-clockwise rotation within the longitudinal phase space and allows to compensate the chirp completely. Analytical scaling predicts energy spread values below 0.01 percentage level. Ultrahigh 5D-brightness combined with minimized energy spread opens a path towards witness beams with unprecedented ultrahigh 6D-brightness [1]. [1] Manahan*, G.G. and Habib*, A.F. et al. Nat. Commun.8,15705 (2017) (* equal contribution)

Authors

  • Fahim Habib

    • University of Strathclyde, The Cockcroft Institute
  • Grace G. Manahan

    • University of Strathclyde, The Cockcroft Institute
  • Paul Scherkl

    • University of Strathclyde, The Cockcroft Institute
  • Thomas Heinemann

    • University of Strathclyde, The Cockcroft Institute
  • Z.M. Sheng

    • University of Strathclyde, The Cockcroft Institute
  • D.L. Bruhwiler

    • RadiaSoft LLC
  • J.R. Cary

    • University of Colorado Boulder, Tech-X Corporation
  • J.B. Rosenzweig

    • UCLA
  • Bernhard Hidding

    • University of Strathclyde, The Cockcroft Institute