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High average power ultrafast laser technologies for driving future advanced accelerators

  • Leily Kiani
  • , Tong Zhou
  • , Seung Whan Bahk
  • , Jake Bromage
  • , David Bruhwiler
  • , E. Michael Campbell
  • , Zenghu Chang
  • , Enam Chowdhury
  • , Michael Downer
  • , Qiang Du
  • , Eric Esarey
  • , Almantas Galvanauskas
  • , Thomas Galvin
  • , Constantin Häfner
  • , Dieter Hoffmann
  • , Chan Joshi
  • , Manoj Kanskar
  • , Wei Lu
  • , Carmen Menoni
  • , Michael Messerly
  • Sergey B. Mirov, Mark Palmer, Igor Pogorelsky, Mikhail Polyanskiy, Erik Power, Brendan Reagan, Jorge Rocca, Joshua Rothenberg, Bruno E. Schmidt, Emily Sistrunk, Thomas Spinka, Sergei Tochitsky, Navid Vafaei-Najafabadi, Jeroen van Tilborg, Russell Wilcox, Jonathan Zuegel, Cameron Geddes
  • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • University of Rochester
  • University of Central Florida
  • Ohio State University
  • University of Texas at Austin
  • University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
  • Fraunhofer Institute for Laser Technology
  • University of California at Los Angeles
  • nLIGHT Corporation
  • Raytum Photonics LLC
  • Colorado State University
  • University of Alabama at Birmingham
  • Brookhaven National Laboratory
  • Northrop Grumman
  • Inc.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

23 Scopus citations

Abstract

Large scale laser facilities are needed to advance the energy frontier in high energy physics and accelerator physics. Laser plasma accelerators are core to advanced accelerator concepts aimed at reaching TeV electron electron colliders. In these facilities, intense laser pulses drive plasmas and are used to accelerate electrons to high energies in remarkably short distances. A laser plasma accelerator could in principle reach high energies with an accelerating length that is 1000 times shorter than in conventional RF based accelerators. Notionally, laser driven particle beam energies could scale beyond state of the art conventional accelerators. LPAs have produced multi GeV electron beams in about 20 cm with relative energy spread of about 2 percent, supported by highly developed laser technology. This validates key elements of the US DOE strategy for such accelerators to enable future colliders but extending best results to date to a TeV collider will require lasers with higher average power. While the per pulse energies envisioned for laser driven colliders are achievable with current lasers, low laser repetition rates limit potential collider luminosity. Applications will require rates of kHz to tens of kHz at Joules of energy and high efficiency, and a collider would require about 100 such stages, a leap from current Hz class LPAs. This represents a challenging 1000 fold increase in laser repetition rates beyond current state of the art. This whitepaper describes current research and outlook for candidate laser systems as well as the accompanying broadband and high damage threshold optics needed for driving future advanced accelerators.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberT08006
JournalJournal of Instrumentation
Volume18
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 1 2023

Keywords

  • Accelerator Subsystems and Technologies
  • Lasers
  • Wake-field acceleration (laser-driven, electron-driven)

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