Abstract
3D numerical simulations of the interaction of a powerful CO2 laser with hydrogen jets demonstrating the role of ionization and laser beam quality are presented. Simulations are performed in support of the plasma wakefield accelerator experiments being conducted at the BNL Accelerator Test Facility (ATF). The CO2 laser at BNL ATF has several potential advantages for laser wakefield acceleration compared to widely used solid-state lasers. SPACE, a parallel relativistic Particle-in-Cell code, developed at SBU and BNL, has been used in these studies. A novelty of the code is its set of efficient atomic physics algorithms that compute ionization and recombination rates on the grid and transfer them to particles. The primary goal of the initial BNL experiments was to characterize the plasma density by measuring the sidebands in the spectrum of the probe laser. Simulations, that resolve hydrogen ionization and laser spectra, help explain several trends that were observed in the experiments[1].
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 042008 |
| Journal | Journal of Physics: Conference Series |
| Volume | 1067 |
| Issue number | 4 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Oct 5 2018 |
| Event | 9th International Particle Accelerator Conference, IPAC 2018 - Vancouver, Canada Duration: Apr 29 2018 → May 4 2018 |
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