Collisionless shock acceleration of narrow energy spread ion beams from mixed species plasmas using 1  μm lasers

Collisionless shock acceleration of protons and C^{6+} ions has been achieved by the interaction of a 10^{20}  W/cm^{2}, 1  μm laser with a near-critical density plasma. Ablation of the initially solid density target by a secondary laser allows for systematic control of the plasma profile. This enab...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: A. Pak, S. Kerr, N. Lemos, A. Link, P. Patel, F. Albert, L. Divol, B. B. Pollock, D. Haberberger, D. Froula, M. Gauthier, S. H. Glenzer, A. Longman, L. Manzoor, R. Fedosejevs, S. Tochitsky, C. Joshi, F. Fiuza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2018-10-01
Series:Physical Review Accelerators and Beams
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.21.103401
Description
Summary:Collisionless shock acceleration of protons and C^{6+} ions has been achieved by the interaction of a 10^{20}  W/cm^{2}, 1  μm laser with a near-critical density plasma. Ablation of the initially solid density target by a secondary laser allows for systematic control of the plasma profile. This enables the production of beams with peaked spectra with energies of 10–18  MeV/amu and energy spreads of 10%–20% with up to 3×10^{9} particles within these narrow spectral features. The narrow energy spread and similar velocity of ion species with different charge-to-mass ratios are consistent with acceleration by the moving potential of a shock wave. Particle-in-cell simulations show shock accelerated beams of protons and C^{6+} ions with energy distributions consistent with the experiments. Simulations further indicate the plasma profile determines the trade-off between the beam charge and energy and that with additional target optimization narrow energy spread beams exceeding 100  MeV/amu can be produced using the same laser conditions.
ISSN:2469-9888