hollow channel plasma wakefield acceleration

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Hollow Channel Plasma Wakefield Acceleration Spencer Gessner 5 th SAREC Review September 15 th , 2014

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Hollow Channel Plasma Wakefield Acceleration. Spencer Gessner 5 th SAREC Review September 15 th , 2014. Collaboration. N. Vafaei-Najafabadi, C.E. Clayton, K.A. Marsh, W. An, W. Lu, W.B. Mori, C.Joshi. E. Adli - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Hollow Channel  Plasma Wakefield Acceleration

Hollow Channel Plasma Wakefield Acceleration

Spencer Gessner

5th SAREC Review

September 15th, 2014

Page 2: Hollow Channel  Plasma Wakefield Acceleration

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Collaboration

N. Vafaei-Najafabadi, C.E. Clayton, K.A. Marsh, W. An, W. Lu, W.B. Mori, C.Joshi

E. AdliJ. Allen, C.I. Clarke, S. Corde, J. Frederico, S. Gessner, S.Z. Green, M. Litos, D. Walz, M.J. Hogan, V. Yakimenko

P. Muggli

Page 3: Hollow Channel  Plasma Wakefield Acceleration

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Goal

Our aim is to demonstrate a method for accelerating positron beams in a plasma using extremely large gradients while preserving the beam emittance.

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Why Explore Hollow Channel Plasmas?

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Why Explore Hollow Channel Plasmas?

Accelerating but defocusing for positrons.

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Why Explore Hollow Channel Plasmas?

Where can we load a positron beam in an electron beam-driven blowout wake?

Wrong slope for positron beam loading.

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. . . Hollow channel plasmas were created in the laboratory in 2000 . . .

The Hollow Channel Solution

First proposed and studied theoretically in the 90’s . . .

. . . And we can actually test this technique with positron beams at FACET!

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What is a Hollow Channel Plasma?

Osiris2D simulations performed on Hoffman2 cluster at UCLA.

Hollow channel plasmas provides a scenario where we can access GeV/m scale accelerating gradients without focusing (or defocusing) forces from background ions.

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How do you make a Hollow Channel Plasma?

Phase profile:

Intensity profile:

The high-order Bessel profile has zero on-axis intensity and transverse shape does not depend on z.

Mask Pattern Intensity Pattern Vertical Lineout

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T504 Hollow Channel Test Beam Experiment

e+

Laser in Laser out

OTR lightSpiral Optic

Ionized Region

The goal of the T504 Test Beam Experiment was to demonstrate the production of a hollow channel plasma.

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T504 Raster Scan

Channel position relative to positron beam

We use the positron beam to probe the structure of the channel.

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T504 Results

Bea

m A

rea

m2]

The beam area growth is smallest when the beam is near the center of the channel.

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T504 Results

The beam is minimally deflected near the center of the channel.

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Looking Forward: Improved Optics

The new optics double the on-target energy.

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Looking Forward: Improved Diagnostics

The hollow channel experiment requires laser diagnostics that are only possible with a gas beamline.

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Goals and Timeline

Final Goal: Demonstrate GeV scale acceleration of a positron and show that the beam’s emittance is preserved.

Spring 2014

Fall 2014

Spring 2015

Fall2015

Spring 2015

Develop and Improve techniques for creating hollow channel plasmas

Develop laser-plasma techniques for diagnosing hollow channel plasmas

Characterize hollow channel wakefields with a low-intensity beam (linear regime)

Characterize hollow channel wakefields with a high-intensity beam (nonlinear regime)

Establish tolerances for beam offset and angular misalignment

Two-bunch acceleration with positron driver and positron witness

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Conclusion

The T504 Test Beam Experiment was successful; we clearly demonstrated the formation of a hollow channel plasma.

We have identified critical areas where the experiment can be improved and are actively working on these items.

The hollow channel experiment should be preformed in gas as opposed to lithium vapor.

There is a limited window for positron experiments at FACET. Let’s make the most of the time we have left!