Paper
7 May 2009 Electron beam pointing stability of a laser wakefield accelerator
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Abstract
Electron acceleration using plasma waves driven by ultra-short relativistic intensity laser pulses has undoubtedly excellent potential for driving a compact light source. However, for a wakefield accelerator to become a useful and reliable compact accelerator the beam properties need to meet a minimum standard. To demonstrate the feasibility of a wakefield based radiation source we have reliably produced electron beams with energies of 82±5 MeV, with 1±0.2% energy spread and 3 mrad r.m.s. divergence using a 0.9 J, 35 fs 800 nm laser. Reproducible beam pointing is essential for transporting the beam along the electron beam line. We find experimentally that electrons are accelerated close to the laser axis at low plasma densities. However, at plasma densities in excess of 1019 cm-3, electron beams have an elliptical beam profile with the major axis of the ellipse rotated with respect to the direction of polarization of the laser.
© (2009) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
R. C. Issac, G. Vieux, G. H Welsh, R. Shanks, E. Brunetti, S. Cipiccia, M. P. Anania, X. Yang, S. M. Wiggins, M. R. Islam, B. Ersfeld, J. Farmer, G. Raj, S. Chen, D. Clark, T. McCanny, and D. A. Jaroszynski "Electron beam pointing stability of a laser wakefield accelerator", Proc. SPIE 7359, Harnessing Relativistic Plasma Waves as Novel Radiation Sources from Terahertz to X-Rays and Beyond, 735915 (7 May 2009); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.822165
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Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Plasma

Electron beams

Pulsed laser operation

Polarization

Laser stabilization

Optical testing

Cameras

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