Paper | Title | Page |
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TUOBB01 | A European Proposal for the Compton Gamma-ray Source of ELI-NP | 1086 |
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A European proposal is under preparation for the Compton gamma-ray Source of ELI-NP. In the Romanian pillar of ELI (the European Extreme Light Infrastructure) an advanced gamma-ray beam is foreseen, coupled to two 10 PW laser systems. The photons will be generated by Compton back-scattering in the collision between a high quality electron beam and a high power laser. A European collaboration formed by INFN, Univ. of Roma La Sapienza, Orsay-LAL of IN2P3, Univ. de Paris Sud XI and ASTeC at Daresbury, is preparing a TDR exploring the feasibility of a machine expected to achieve the Gamma-ray beam specifications: energy tunable between 1 and 20 MeV, narrow bandwidth (0.3%) and high spectral density, 104 photons/sec/eV. We will describe the lay-out of the 720 MeV RF Linac and the collision laser with the associated optical cavity, as well as the optimized beam dynamics to achieve maximum phase space density at the collision, taking into account beam loading and beam break-up due to the acceleration of long bunch trains. The predicted gamma-ray spectra will be evaluated as the gamma photons collimators background. An option for electron bunches recirculation will also be illustrated. | ||
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Slides TUOBB01 [5.099 MB] | |
WEEPPB002 | Plasma Acceleration Experiment at SPARCLAB with External Injection | 2169 |
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At the SPARC-LAB facility of INFN-LNF we are installing two transport lines for ultra-short electron bunches and an ultra-intense laser pulses, generated by the SPARC photo-injector and by the FLAME laser in a synchronized fashion at the tens of fs level, to co-propagate inside a hydrogen filled glass capillary, in order to perform acceleration of the electron bunch by a plasma wave driven by the laser pulse. The main aim of this experiment is to demonstrate that a high brightness electron beam can be accelerated by a plasma wave without any significant degradation of its quality. A 10 pC electron bunch, 10 fs long is produced by SPARC and transported to injection into the capillary, which is 100 micron wide, at a gas density around 5*1017 ne/cm3 . The laser pulse, 25 fs long, focused down to 30 microns into the capillary is injected ahead of the bunch, drives a weakly non-linear plasma wave with wavelength of about 120 microns. A proper phasing of the two pulses allows acceleration of electrons from the injection energy of 150 MeV up to about 1 GeV for a 10 cm long capillary. Installation of the beam lines is foreseen by the end of 2012 and first tests starting in mid 2013. | ||
WEPPP017 | Recent Results at the SPARCLAB Facility | 2758 |
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A new facility named SPARCLAB (Sources for Plasma Accelerators and Radiation Compton with Lasers and Beams) has been recently launched at the INFN National Labs in Frascati, merging the potentialities of the old projects SPARC and PLASMONX. The SPARC project, a collaboration among INFN, ENEA and CNR, is now completed, hosting a 150 MeV high brightness electron beam injector which feeds a 12 meters long undulator. Observation of FEL radiation in the SASE, Seeded and HHG modes has been performed from 500 nm down to 40 nm wevelength. A second beam line has been also installed to drive a narrow band THz radiation source. In parallel to that, INFN decided to host a 300 TW laser that will be linked to the linac and devoted to explore laser-matter interaction, in particular with regard to laser-plasma acceleration in the self injection and external injection modes, (the PLASMONX experiments). The facility will be also used for particle driven plasma acceleration experiments (the COMB experiment). A Thomson scattering experiment coupling the electron bunch to the high-power laser to generate coherent monochromatic X-ray radiation is also in the commissioning phase. | ||
FRXAA01 |
Marrying Lasers and Particle Beams | |
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Marrying Lasers and Particle Beams is a way to enhance the production of advanced radiation, to create acceleration at very high gradient, to manipulate and diagnose beams in their phase spaces and to generate particles from ps to attosec time structure. Lasers are beams in their own: we can copropagate them with electron beams, in vacuum or in plasmas, to enhance the FEL emission by the electrons, or to absorb energy from the plasma wave driven by the laser, i.e. the future of high gradient acceleration. We can counter-propagate laser and electron beams in vacuum, setting up a collider that provides high energy photons via Compton back-scattering, up to tens of MeV, opening the nuclear photonics hera. We can generate electrons or protons sending lasers on solid targets: below the damaging threshold in photocathodes for electron beams in RF photoinjectors, well above it to generate protons with laser intensities exceeding 1019 W/cm2, by blowing up the target material. The marriage between lasers and beams will evolve toward advancing the properties of secondary beams produced, either radiation or particles, in the direction of higher brilliance, rapidity and denser phase spaces. | ||
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Slides FRXAA01 [6.486 MB] | |