Author
Listed:
- C. G. R. Geddes
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
University of California)
- Cs. Toth
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- J. van Tilborg
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Technische Universiteit Eindhoven)
- E. Esarey
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- C. B. Schroeder
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
- D. Bruhwiler
(Tech-X Corporation)
- C. Nieter
(Tech-X Corporation)
- J. Cary
(Tech-X Corporation
University of Colorado)
- W. P. Leemans
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
Abstract
Laser-driven accelerators, in which particles are accelerated by the electric field of a plasma wave (the wakefield) driven by an intense laser, have demonstrated accelerating electric fields of hundreds of GV m-1 (refs 1–3). These fields are thousands of times greater than those achievable in conventional radio-frequency accelerators, spurring interest in laser accelerators4,5 as compact next-generation sources of energetic electrons and radiation. To date, however, acceleration distances have been severely limited by the lack of a controllable method for extending the propagation distance of the focused laser pulse. The ensuing short acceleration distance results in low-energy beams with 100 per cent electron energy spread1,2,3, which limits potential applications. Here we demonstrate a laser accelerator that produces electron beams with an energy spread of a few per cent, low emittance and increased energy (more than 109 electrons above 80 MeV). Our technique involves the use of a preformed plasma density channel to guide a relativistically intense laser, resulting in a longer propagation distance. The results open the way for compact and tunable high-brightness sources of electrons and radiation.
Suggested Citation
C. G. R. Geddes & Cs. Toth & J. van Tilborg & E. Esarey & C. B. Schroeder & D. Bruhwiler & C. Nieter & J. Cary & W. P. Leemans, 2004.
"High-quality electron beams from a laser wakefield accelerator using plasma-channel guiding,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 431(7008), pages 538-541, September.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:431:y:2004:i:7008:d:10.1038_nature02900
DOI: 10.1038/nature02900
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