Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams (Sep 2004)

Detailed experimental results for high-trapping efficiency and narrow energy spread in a laser-driven accelerator

  • W. D. Kimura,
  • L. P. Campbell,
  • C. E. Dilley,
  • S. C. Gottschalk,
  • D. C. Quimby,
  • M. Babzien,
  • I. Ben-Zvi,
  • J. C. Gallardo,
  • K. P. Kusche,
  • I. V. Pogorelsky,
  • J. Skaritka,
  • V. Yakimenko,
  • D. B. Cline,
  • F. Zhou,
  • L. C. Steinhauer,
  • R. H. Pantell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.7.091301
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 9
p. 091301

Abstract

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Presented are details of the staged electron laser acceleration (STELLA) experiment, which demonstrated high-trapping efficiency and narrow energy spread in a staged laser-driven accelerator. Trapping efficiencies of up to 80% and energy spreads down to 0.36% (1σ) were demonstrated. The experiment validated an approach that may be suitable for the basic design of a laser-driven accelerator system. In this approach, a laser-driven modulator together with a chicane creates a train of microbunches spaced apart by the laser wavelength. These microbunches are sent into a second laser-driven accelerator designed to efficiently trap the microbunches in the ponderomotive potential well of the laser electric field while maintaining a narrow energy spread. The STELLA scientific apparatus and procedures are described in detail. In-depth comparisons between the data and model are given including the predicted energy spectrum, energy-phase plot, and microbunch length profile. Data and model comparisons as a function of the phase delay between the microbunches and the accelerating wave are presented. The model is exercised to reveal how the high-trapping efficiency process evolves during the acceleration process.