High-throughput injection–acceleration of electron bunches from a linear accelerator to a laser wakefield accelerator

Plasma-based accelerators driven by either intense lasers1 or charged particle beams2 can accelerate electrons or positrons with extremely high gradients compared with conventional radio-frequency accelerators. For their use as next-generation light sources and in energy frontier colliders3, beams w...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inNature physics Vol. 17; no. 7; pp. 801 - 806
Main Authors Wu, Yipeng, Hua, Jianfei, Zhou, Zheng, Zhang, Jie, Liu, Shuang, Peng, Bo, Fang, Yu, Ning, Xiaonan, Nie, Zan, Li, Fei, Zhang, Chaojie, Pai, Chih-Hao, Du, Yingchao, Lu, Wei, Mori, Warren B., Joshi, Chan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group 01.07.2021
Nature Publishing Group (NPG)
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Plasma-based accelerators driven by either intense lasers1 or charged particle beams2 can accelerate electrons or positrons with extremely high gradients compared with conventional radio-frequency accelerators. For their use as next-generation light sources and in energy frontier colliders3, beams with good stability, high quality, controllable polarization and excellent reproducibility4,5 are required. The accelerated electrons can be either internally injected directly from the background plasma or externally injected from conventional accelerators. Despite significant progress6–14, the beam properties obtained with the internal injection scheme fall short of simultaneously reaching these requirements. In contrast, such high-property beams are routinely generated from conventional accelerators. Therefore, it is important to demonstrate the injection from a conventional accelerator into a plasma-based machine followed by further acceleration of the beam. Here we report the demonstration of external injection from a conventional linear accelerator into a laser wakefield accelerator and subsequent acceleration without any significant loss of charge, which is achieved by properly shaping and matching the beam into the plasma structure. The experimental results, combined with three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations, indicate that this is possible with modest degradation in the beam quality. This work is an important step towards realizing a high-throughput, multistage, high-energy, hybrid conventional-plasma-based accelerator.Previously, injections from a conventional accelerator into a plasma-based one suffered from low coupling efficiencies. Now electron bunches are injected with an efficiency of nearly 100% into a laser wakefield accelerator without loss of charge.
Bibliography:USDOE
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS)
National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)
SC0010064; 11535006; 11991071; 11775125; 11875175; SC0008491; SC0008316; 1734315
ISSN:1745-2473
1745-2481
DOI:10.1038/s41567-021-01202-6