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Extending laser plasma accelerators into the mid-IR spectral domain with a next-generation ultra-fast CO2 laser

  • I. V. Pogorelsky
  • , M. Babzien
  • , I. Ben-Zvi
  • , M. N. Polyanskiy
  • , J. Skaritka
  • , O. Tresca
  • , N. P. Dover
  • , Z. Najmudin
  • , W. Lu
  • , N. Cook
  • , A. Ting
  • , Y. H. Chen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

Expanding the scope of relativistic plasma research to wavelengths longer than the λ/≈ 0.8-1.1 μm range covered by conventional mode-locked solid-state lasers would offer attractive opportunities due to the quadratic scaling of the ponderomotive electron energy and critical plasma density with λ. Answering this quest, a next-generation mid-IR laser project is being advanced at the BNL ATF as a part of the user facility upgrade. We discuss the technical approach to this conceptually new 100 TW, 100 fs, λ = 9-11 μm CO2 laser BESTIA (Brookhaven Experimental Supra-Terawatt Infrared at ATF) that encompasses several innovations applied for the first time to molecular gas lasers. BESTIA will enable new regimes of laser plasma accelerators. One example is shock-wave ion acceleration (SWA) from gas jets. We review ongoing efforts to achieve stable, monoenergetic proton acceleration by dynamically shaping the plasma density profile from a hydrogen gas target with laser-produced blast waves. At its full power, 100 TW BESTIA promises to achieve proton beams at an energy exceeding 200 MeV. In addition to ion acceleration in over-critical plasma, the ultra-intense mid-IR BESTIA will open up new opportunities in driving wakefields in tenuous plasmas, expanding the landscape of laser wakefield accelerator (LWFA) studies into the unexplored long-wavelength spectral domain. Simple wavelength scaling suggests that a 100 TW CO2 laser beam will be capable of efficiently generating plasma 'bubbles' a thousand times greater in volume compared with a near-IR solid state laser of an equivalent power. Combined with a femtosecond electron linac available at the ATF, this wavelength scaling will facilitate the study of external seeding and staging of LWFAs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number034003
JournalPlasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
Volume58
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 22 2016

Keywords

  • CO laser
  • ion beams
  • laser acceleration
  • plasma wakefield

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