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Simulation Study of an LWFA-based Electron Injector for AWAKE Run 2

The AWAKE experiment aims to demonstrate preservation of injected electron beam quality during acceleration in proton-driven plasma waves. The short bunch duration required to correctly load the wakefield is challenging to meet with the current electron injector system, given the space available to...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Williamson, Barney, Xia, Guoxing, Döbert, Steffen, Karsch, Stefan, Muggli, Patric
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2018.02.005
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2299349
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author Williamson, Barney
Xia, Guoxing
Döbert, Steffen
Karsch, Stefan
Muggli, Patric
author_facet Williamson, Barney
Xia, Guoxing
Döbert, Steffen
Karsch, Stefan
Muggli, Patric
author_sort Williamson, Barney
collection CERN
description The AWAKE experiment aims to demonstrate preservation of injected electron beam quality during acceleration in proton-driven plasma waves. The short bunch duration required to correctly load the wakefield is challenging to meet with the current electron injector system, given the space available to the beamline. An LWFA readily provides short-duration electron beams with sufficient charge from a compact design, and provides a scalable option for future electron acceleration experiments at AWAKE. Simulations of a shock-front injected LWFA demonstrate a 43 TW laser system would be sufficient to produce the required charge over a range of energies beyond 100 MeV. LWFA beams typically have high peak current and large divergence on exiting their native plasmas, and optimisation of bunch parameters before injection into the proton-driven wakefields is required. Compact beam transport solutions are discussed. •A laser-wakefield accelerator for the AWAKE Run 2 electron injector is studied.•Two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations inform laser and plasma specifications.•Required beam parameters prior to injection are outlined with possible solutions.•A permanent magnetic quadrupole triplet is designed and beam transport discussed.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2017
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spelling cern-22993492023-09-29T02:37:56Zdoi:10.1016/j.nima.2018.02.005http://cds.cern.ch/record/2299349engWilliamson, BarneyXia, GuoxingDöbert, SteffenKarsch, StefanMuggli, PatricSimulation Study of an LWFA-based Electron Injector for AWAKE Run 2physics.plasm-phOther Fields of Physicsphysics.acc-phAccelerators and Storage RingsThe AWAKE experiment aims to demonstrate preservation of injected electron beam quality during acceleration in proton-driven plasma waves. The short bunch duration required to correctly load the wakefield is challenging to meet with the current electron injector system, given the space available to the beamline. An LWFA readily provides short-duration electron beams with sufficient charge from a compact design, and provides a scalable option for future electron acceleration experiments at AWAKE. Simulations of a shock-front injected LWFA demonstrate a 43 TW laser system would be sufficient to produce the required charge over a range of energies beyond 100 MeV. LWFA beams typically have high peak current and large divergence on exiting their native plasmas, and optimisation of bunch parameters before injection into the proton-driven wakefields is required. Compact beam transport solutions are discussed. •A laser-wakefield accelerator for the AWAKE Run 2 electron injector is studied.•Two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations inform laser and plasma specifications.•Required beam parameters prior to injection are outlined with possible solutions.•A permanent magnetic quadrupole triplet is designed and beam transport discussed.The AWAKE experiment aims to demonstrate preservation of injected electron beam quality during acceleration in proton-driven plasma waves. The short bunch duration required to correctly load the wakefield is challenging to meet with the current electron injector system, given the space available to the beamline. An LWFA readily provides short-duration electron beams with sufficient charge from a compact design, and provides a scalable option for future electron acceleration experiments at AWAKE. Simulations of a shock-front injected LWFA demonstrate a 43 TW laser system would be sufficient to produce the required charge over a range of energies beyond 100 MeV. LWFA beams typically have high peak current and large divergence on exiting their native plasmas, and optimisation of bunch parameters before injection into the proton-driven wakefields is required. Compact beam transport solutions are discussed.arXiv:1712.00255oai:cds.cern.ch:22993492017-12-01
spellingShingle physics.plasm-ph
Other Fields of Physics
physics.acc-ph
Accelerators and Storage Rings
Williamson, Barney
Xia, Guoxing
Döbert, Steffen
Karsch, Stefan
Muggli, Patric
Simulation Study of an LWFA-based Electron Injector for AWAKE Run 2
title Simulation Study of an LWFA-based Electron Injector for AWAKE Run 2
title_full Simulation Study of an LWFA-based Electron Injector for AWAKE Run 2
title_fullStr Simulation Study of an LWFA-based Electron Injector for AWAKE Run 2
title_full_unstemmed Simulation Study of an LWFA-based Electron Injector for AWAKE Run 2
title_short Simulation Study of an LWFA-based Electron Injector for AWAKE Run 2
title_sort simulation study of an lwfa-based electron injector for awake run 2
topic physics.plasm-ph
Other Fields of Physics
physics.acc-ph
Accelerators and Storage Rings
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2018.02.005
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2299349
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AT dobertsteffen simulationstudyofanlwfabasedelectroninjectorforawakerun2
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