Cargando…

Nanoplasmonic Accelerators Towards Tens of TeraVolts per Meter Gradients Using Nanomaterials

Ultra-high gradients which are critical for future advances in high-energy physics, have so far relied on plasma and dielectric accelerating structures. While bulk crystals were predicted to offer unparalleled TV/m gradients that are at least two orders of magnitude higher than gaseous plasmas, crys...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sahai, Aakash A, Golkowski, Mark, Harid, Vijay, Joshi, Chan, Katsouleas, Tom, Latina, Andrea, Resta-López, Javier, Taborek, Peter, Thomas, Alexander, Zimmermann, Frank
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: JACoW 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-MOPAB168
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2807011
Descripción
Sumario:Ultra-high gradients which are critical for future advances in high-energy physics, have so far relied on plasma and dielectric accelerating structures. While bulk crystals were predicted to offer unparalleled TV/m gradients that are at least two orders of magnitude higher than gaseous plasmas, crystal-based acceleration has not been realized in practice. We have developed the concept of nanoplasmonic crunch-in surface modes which utilizes the tunability of collective oscillations in nanomaterials to open up unprecedented tens of TV/m gradients. Particle beams interacting with nanomaterials that have vacuum-like core regions, experience minimal disruptive effects such as filamentation and collisions, while the beam-driven crunch-in modes sustain tens of TV/m gradients. Moreover, as the effective apertures for transverse and longitudinal crunch-in wakes are different, the limitation of traditional scaling of structure wakefields to smaller dimensions is significantly relaxed. The SLAC FACET-II experiment of the nano2WA collaboration will utilize ultra-short, high-current electron beams to excite nonlinear plasmonic modes and demonstrate this possibility.