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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Diagnostics for the Texas Petawatt laser-plasma accelerator

Du, Dongsu, 1985- 04 January 2011 (has links)
Since 2004, table-top laser-plasma accelerators (LPAs) driven by ˜30fs terwatt laser pulses have produced colimated, nearly mono-energetic eletron bunches with energy up to 1 GeV in laboratories around the world. Large-scale computer simulations show that LPAs can scale to higher energy while retaining high beam quality, but will require laser pulses of higher energy and longer duration than current LPAs. The group of Prof. Mike Downer, in collaboration with the Texas Petawatt (TPW) laser team headed by Prof. Todd Ditmire, is setting up an experiment that uses the TPW laser (1.1 PW, 150 fs) to drive the world’s first multi-GeV LPA. This thesis provides a general overview of the TPW-LPA project, including several diagnostic systems for the beam, plasma and laser pulse. Special attention is given to three of the diagnostic systems: (1)A transverse interferometry diagnostic of the plasma density profile created by the TPW laser pulse; (2)A Thomson scattering diagnostic of the self-guided path of the TPW laser pulse through the plasma; (3)An optical transition radiation diagnostic of the accelerated electron bunch exiting the plasma. In each case, basic principles, theoretical background, calculation and simulation results, and preliminary experimental results will be presented. / text
2

Transport et manipulation d’électrons produits par interaction laser plasma sur la ligne COXINEL / Transport and manipulation of electrons produced by laser plasma interaction on COXINEL beam line

André, Thomas 18 December 2018 (has links)
Les récents progrès en termes de techniques d’accélération par interaction Laser Plasma (LPA) permettent aujourd’hui de générer de forts gradients accélérateurs (GV.m⁻¹); cependant, les faisceaux d’électrons ainsi produits présentent encore une grande dispersion énergie (%) et une divergence élevée (mrad). Le projet COXINEL (ERC Advanced Grant 350014, PI. M.E. Couprie), vise à qualifier, en remplacement d’un accélérateur conventionnel, un accélérateur Laser Plasma, dans le but d’une application de Laser à Électrons Libres. Pour atteindre les propriétés requises, le faisceau d’électrons doit être manipulé à l’aide d’une ligne de transport. Cette ligne est constituée d’un premier triplet de quadrupôles à aimants permanents de gradient variable qui focalise le faisceau et permet la maîtrise de la divergence initiale. Une chicane électromagnétique réduit ensuite la dispersion en énergie par tranche en allongeant longitudinalement le faisceau. Une gamme d’énergie restreinte peut être ensuite sélectionnée via l’insertion d’une fente dans la chicane. Enfin, un quadruplet de quadrupôles électromagnétiques fournit la focalisation finale dans un onduleur. Le travail de thèse porte sur l’étude du transport des faisceaux d’électrons produit par LPA le long de cette ligne. Différents régimes de production d’électrons ont été utilisés : injection par ionisation, cellule de gaz. La maîtrise du transport a été obtenue à l’aide d’une nouvelle méthode d’alignement et de compensation de dérive de pointé initial des électrons en réglant de manière indépendante la position et la dispersion du faisceau à différents endroits de la ligne. Un réglage fin de l’énergie transportée a été effectué en ajustant le gradient des quadrupôles. Les faisceaux produits ont été transportés le long de la ligne et caractérisés en termes de distribution transverse, d’émittance et d’énergie. Les résultats expérimentaux ont ensuite été comparés avec succès aux simulations numériques. Ce travail ouvre la voie à l’observation de rayonnement de l’onduleur, étape préliminaire à une amplification Laser à Électrons Libres. / Recent advances in Laser Plasma Acceleration techniques (LPA) are now able to generate strong accelerating gradients (GV.m⁻¹); however the produced electron beam thus still presents a large energy spread (%) and a large divergence (mrad). The COXINEL project (ERC Advanced Grant 350014, PI. M.E. Couprie), aims at qualifying, in replacement of a conventional accelerator, a Laser Plasma Accelerator, for a Free Electrons Laser application. To achieve the required properties, the electron beam must be manipulated using a transport line. This line consists in a first triplet of permanent magnets quadrupoles of variable gradient which focuses the beam and allows for the control of the initial divergence. An electromagnetic chicane then reduces the slice energy spread by lengthening the beam longitudinally. A restricted energy range can then be selected by inserting a slit inside the chicane. Finally, a quadruple of electromagnetic quadrupoles provides the final focus in an undulator. The thesis deals on the study of electron beam transport produced by LPA along this line. Different electron production regimes have been used: ionization injection, gas cell. The transport was controlled using a new alignment and pointing compensation method for the initial electron beam by adjusting independently the beam position and dispersion at different location on the line. A fine adjustment of the transported energy was carried out by adjusting the quadrupole gradient. The produced beam was transported along the line and was characterized in terms of transverse distribution, emittance and energy. Experimental results were then successfully compared with numerical simulations. This work paves the way for the observation of undulator radiation, a preliminary step before Free Electron Laser amplification.
3

Measuring sub-femtosecond temporal structures in multi-ten kiloampere electron beams

Zarini, Omid 29 May 2019 (has links)
In laser wakefield acceleration, an ultra-short high-intensity laser pulse excites a plasma wave, which can sustain accelerating electric fields of several hundred GV/m. This scheme advances a novel concept for compact and less expensive electron accelerators, which can be hosted in a typical university size laboratory. Furthermore, laser wakefield accelerators (LWFA) feature unique electron bunch characteristics, namely micrometer size with duration ranging from several fs to tens of fs. Precise knowledge of the longitudinal profile of such ultra-short electron bunches is essential for the design of future table-top X-ray light-sources and remains a big challenge due to the resolution limit of existing diagnostic techniques. Spectral measurement of broadband coherent and incoherent transition radiation (TR) produced when electron bunches passing through a metal foil is a promising way to analyze longitudinal characteristics of these bunches. Due to the limited reproducibility of the electron source this measurement highly requires single-shot capability. An ultra-broadband spectrometer combines the TR spectrum in UV/NIR (200-1000 nm), NIR (0.9-1.7 µm) and mid-IR (1.6-12 µm). A high spectral sensitivity, dynamic bandwidth and spectral resolution are realized by three optimized dispersion and detection systems integrated into a single-shot spectrometer. A complete characterization and calibration of the spectrometer have been done concerning wavelengths, relative spectral sensitivities, and absolute photometric sensitivities, also taking into account for the light polarization. The TR spectrometer is able to characterize electron bunches with charges as low as 1pC and can resolve time-scales of 0.4 fs. Electron bunches up to 16 fs (rms width) can be reconstructed from their TR spectrum. In the presented work, the self-truncated ionization induced injection (STII) scheme has been explored to study the relevant beam parameters especially its longitudinal bunch profile and the resulting peak current.
4

Transverse electron beam dynamics in the beam loading regime

Köhler, Alexander 11 July 2019 (has links)
GeV electron bunches accelerated on a centimeter scale device exemplify the extraordinary advances of laser-plasma acceleration. The combination of high charges from optimized injection schemes and intrinsic femtosecond short bunch duration yields kiloampere peak currents. Further enhancing the current while reducing the energy spread will pave the way for future application, e.g. the driver for compact secondary radiation sources such as high-field THz, high-brightness x-ray or gamma-ray sources. One essential key for beam transport to a specific application is an electron bunch with high quality beam parameters such as low energy spread as well as small divergence and spot size. The inherent micrometer size at the plasma exit is typically sufficient for an efficient coupling into a conventional beamline. However, energy spread and beam divergence require optimization before the beam can be transported efficiently. Induced by the high peak current, the beam loading regime can be used in order to achieve optimized beam parameters for beam transport. / In this thesis, the impact of beam loading on the transverse electron dynamic is systematically studied by investigating betatron radiation and electron beam divergence. For this reason, the bubble regime with self-truncated ionization injection (STII) is applied to set up a nanocoulomb-class laser wakefield accelerator. The accelerator is driven by 150TW laser pulses from the DRACO high power laser system. A supersonic gas jet provides a 3mm long acceleration medium with electron densities from 3 × 10^18 cm^−3 to 5 × 10^18 cm^−3. The STII scheme together with the employed setup yields highly reproducible injections with bunch charges of up to 0.5 nC. The recorded betatron radius at the accelerator exit is about one micron and reveals that the beam size stays at the same value. The optimal beam loading, which is observed at around 250 pC to 300 pC, leads to the minimum energy spread of ~40MeV and a 20% smaller divergence. It is demonstrated that an incomplete betatron phase mixing due to the small energy spread can explain the experimentally observed minimum beam divergence.
5

Efficient Acceleration of Electrons by an Intense Laser and its Reflection

Feister, Scott 27 September 2016 (has links)
No description available.

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