Improvement of electron beam quality in optical injection schemes using negative plasma density gradients

Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys. 2006 Feb;73(2 Pt 2):026402. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevE.73.026402. Epub 2006 Feb 6.

Abstract

Enhanced electron trapping using plasma density down-ramps as a method for improving the performance of laser injection schemes is proposed and analyzed. A decrease in density implies an increase in plasma wavelength, which can shift a relativistic electron from the defocusing to the focusing region of the accelerating wakefield, and a decrease in wake phase velocity, which lowers the trapping threshold. The specific method of two-pulse colliding pulse injector is examined in detail using a three-dimensional test particle tracking code. A density down-ramp with a change of density on the order of tens of percent over distances greater than the plasma wavelength leads to an enhancement of charge by two orders in magnitude or more, up to the limits imposed by beam loading. The accelerated bunches are ultrashort (fraction of the plasma wavelength--e.g., approximately 5 fs), high charge ( > 20 pC at modest injection laser intensity approximately 10(17) W/cm(2)), with a relative energy spread of a few percent at a mean energy of approximately 25 MeV, and a normalized root-mean-square emittance of the order of 0.5 mm mrad.