Transversely pumped laser driven particle accelerator

ORAL

Abstract

We present a new acceleration scheme capable of accelerating electrons and ions in an underdense plasma. Transversely Pumped Acceleration (TPA) uses multiple arrays of counter-propagating laser beamlets that focus onto a central acceleration axis. Tuning the injection timing and the spacing between the adjacent beamlets allows for precise control over the position and velocity of the intersection point of the counter-propagating beam arrays, resulting in an accelerating structure that propagates orthogonal to the direction of laser propagation. We present the theory that sets the injection timing of the incoming pulses to accelerate electrons and ions with a tunable phase velocity plasma wave. Simulation results are presented which demonstrate 1.2 GeV proton beams accelerated in 3.6 mm of plasma and electron acceleration gradients of 2.5 TeV/m in a scheme that circumvents dephasing. This work has potential applications in medical physics, proton radiography, and high energy physics colliders.

*This work is funded by DOE grant number DE-SC0022109. The authors would like to acknowledge the OSIRIS Consortium, consisting of UCLA and IST (Lisbon, Portugal) for providing access to the OSIRIS 4.0 framework. This research was supported in part through computational resources and services provided by Advanced Research Computing at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

Presenters

  • Tanner Nutting

    • University of Michigan

Authors

  • Tanner Nutting

    • University of Michigan
  • Nicholas P Ernst

    • University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
  • Alec G.R. Thomas

    • University of Michigan
    • Michigan University
  • Karl Michael Krushelnick

    • University of Michigan