Quasi-monoenergetic Laser Plasma Positron Accelerator using Particle-Shower Plasma-Wave Interactions

POSTER

Abstract

An all-optical centimeter-scale laser-plasma positron accelerator is modeled to produce quasi-monoenergetic beams with tunable ultra-relativistic energies. A new principle elucidated here describes the trapping of divergent positrons that are part of a laser-driven electromagnetic shower with a large energy spread and their acceleration into a quasi-monoenergetic positron beam in a laser-driven plasma wave. Proof of this principle using analysis and Particle-In-Cell simulations demonstrates that, under limits defined here, existing lasers can accelerate hundreds of MeV pC quasi-monoenergetic positron bunches. By providing an affordable alternative to kilometer-scale radio-frequency accelerators, this compact positron accelerator opens up new avenues of research such as in Channeling undulators, Gamma Induced Positron Spectroscopy etc apart from being a viable positron source for future colliders.

*This work was supported by the John Adams Institute for Accelerator Science. The use of EPOCH PIC code developed in the UK is acknowledged. The simulations were initially performed using the Chanakya server at Duke University and subsequently using Imperial College High Performance Computing systems.

Presenters

  • Aakash Sahai

    • Imperial College London

Authors

  • Aakash Sahai

    • Imperial College London