Plasma electron acceleration driven by a long-wave-infrared laser.

R Zgadzaj,J Welch,Y Cao, L D Amorim, A Cheng,A Gaikwad, P Iapozzutto,P Kumar, V N Litvinenko,I Petrushina,R Samulyak,N Vafaei-Najafabadi,C Joshi, C Zhang,M Babzien, M Fedurin,R Kupfer, K Kusche, M A Palmer,I V Pogorelsky,M N Polyanskiy, C Swinson,M C Downer

Nature communications(2024)

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摘要
Laser-driven plasma accelerators provide tabletop sources of relativistic electron bunches and femtosecond x-ray pulses, but usually require petawatt-class solid-state-laser pulses of wavelength λL ~ 1 μm. Longer-λL lasers can potentially accelerate higher-quality bunches, since they require less power to drive larger wakes in less dense plasma. Here, we report on a self-injecting plasma accelerator driven by a long-wave-infrared laser: a chirped-pulse-amplified CO2 laser (λL ≈ 10 μm). Through optical scattering experiments, we observed wakes that 4-ps CO2 pulses with <  1/2 terawatt (TW) peak power drove in hydrogen plasma of electron density down to 4 × 1017 cm-3 (1/100 atmospheric density) via a self-modulation (SM) instability. Shorter, more powerful CO2 pulses drove wakes in plasma down to 3 × 1016 cm-3 that captured and accelerated plasma electrons to relativistic energy. Collimated quasi-monoenergetic features in the electron output marked the onset of a transition from SM to bubble-regime acceleration, portending future higher-quality accelerators driven by yet shorter, more powerful pulses.
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plasma electron acceleration,laser,long-wave-infrared
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