Bubble Elongation and Laser slicing in Strongly-Mismatched Regime of Self-Guided Nonlinear Laser-Plasma Acceleration

ORAL

Abstract

A strongly mismatched regime of self-guided laser-plasma acceleration is revealed to be behind a wide-range of groundbreaking experiments. The strong mismatch, in contrast with the matched condition, arises from the incident laser spot-size being much larger than that needed for equilibration of the laser ponderomotive and electron-ion charge-separation force. A nonlinear envelope equation is used to model the steepening of laser radial envelope oscillations. In a steepened squeeze phase, rapid increase in laser intensity leads to the slicing of laser into a strong optical-shock state. As a response to the optical-shock state the acceleration structure elongates rapidly which self-injects high-quality beams. This work thus uncovers a generalized regime that has been favored by many laser-plasma acceleration experiments and opens a novel pathway for future investigations.

*I acknowledge support of the John Adams Institute of Accelerator Science. The EPOCH PIC code used in this research is acknowledged. The simulations were enabled by the Imperial High Performance Computing systems. Several conversations with the Imperial laser team on details of the experimental setup are acknowledged. I acknowledge comments on the work developed here from late Prof. P. K. Kaw and T. C. Katsouleas.

Presenters

  • Aakash Sahai

    • Imperial College London

Authors

  • Aakash Sahai

    • Imperial College London