Each successive generation of X-ray machines has opened up new frontiers in science, such as the first radiographs and the determination of the structure of DNA. State-of-the-art X-ray sources can now produce coherent high-brightness Xrays of greater than kiloelectronvolt energy and promise a new revolution in imaging complex systems on nanometre and femtosecond scales. Despite the demand, only a few dedicated synchrotron facilities exist worldwide, in part because of the size and cost of conventional (accelerator) technology 1 . Here we demonstrate the use of a new generation of laserdriven plasma accelerators 2 , which accelerate high-charge electron beams to high energy in short distances 3-5 , to produce directional, spatially coherent, intrinsically ultrafast beams of hard X-rays. This reduces the size of the synchrotron source from the tens of metres to the centimetre scale, simultaneously accelerating and wiggling the electron beam. The resulting X-ray source is 1,000 times brighter than previously reported plasma wigglers 6,7 and thus has the potential to facilitate a myriad of uses across the whole spectrum of light-source applications.There are a number of proposals to use extreme nonlinear interactions of the latest generation of high-power ultrashort-pulse laser systems to produce beams of high-energy photons with high brightness and short pulse duration. For example, high-order harmonic generation promises trains of coherent pulselets 8 and Compton scattering could extend energies into the γ -regime 9,10 . An alternative proposal has been the use of compact laser-plasma accelerators to drive sources of undulating/wiggling radiation 11 .These accelerators use the plasma wakefield generated by the passage of an intense laser pulse through an underdense plasma 12 . Such wakefields can have intrinsic fields of more than 1,000 times greater than the best achievable by conventional accelerator technology, and thus can accelerate particles to high energies in a fraction of the distance. Recently, it has been demonstrated that at high laser power, the wakefield can be driven to sufficient amplitude to be able to trap large numbers of particles (>100 pC) from the background plasma and accelerate them in a narrow energy spread beam 3-5 , now producing beams of electrons of gigaelectronvoltscale energy of the order of 1 cm (refs 13,14).Such electron sources are of interest to replace the accelerators that drive current synchrotron sources, and typically use multiple periods of alternately poled magnets (undulators or wigglers) to reinforce the synchrotron emission over a length of a few metres. The first demonstrations of wakefield-driven radiation using external wigglers have also been reported, though still being limited to optical or near-optical wavelengths and modest peak brightness 15,16 .However, the particles being accelerated in the plasma accelerator also undergo transverse (betatron) oscillations when subject to the focusing fields of the plasma wave. These oscillations occur at the betatron frequen...
Short pulse laser interactions at intensities of 2×10(21) W cm(-2) with ultrahigh contrast (10(-15)) on submicrometer silicon nitride foils were studied experimentally by using linear and circular polarizations at normal incidence. It was observed that, as the target decreases in thickness, electron heating by the laser begins to occur for circular polarization leading to target normal sheath acceleration of contaminant ions, while at thicker targets no acceleration or electron heating is observed. For linear polarization, all targets showed exponential energy spreads with similar electron temperatures. Particle-in-cell simulations demonstrate that the heating is due to the rapid deformation of the target that occurs early in the interaction. These experiments demonstrate that finite spot size effects can severely restrict the regime suitable for radiation pressure acceleration.
This paper presents the realization and comprehensive characterization of a compact bright source of ultrafast synchrotron radiation with appreciable degree of spatial coherence. It has been drawn to our attention that we had inadvertently neglected to cite some prior works that described selected aspects of the betatron radiation in similar experimental configurations: ref. 1 describes a direct source size measurement based on Fresnel diffraction from laser-based synchrotron radiation demonstrating the resolution that this measurement can yield, and refs 2 and 3 describe indirect measurements of the electron oscillation amplitude based on far-field analysis of the betatron profile and based on the linking of electron and X-ray spectra, respectively. The varied techniques of refs 1-3 give consistent answers for the X-ray source size. Refs 1-3 are consistent with our measurement and modelling. They underline the importance in our experiment to generate high-charge quasi-monoenergetic electron beams to scale up betatron energy and brightness whilst keeping the source size small.
International audienceWe propose and use a technique to measure the transverse emittance of a laser-wakefield accelerated beam of relativistic electrons. The technique is based on the simultaneous measurements of the electron beam divergence given by v(perpendicular to)/v(parallel to), the measured spectrum gamma, and the transverse electron bunch size in the bubble r(perpendicular to). The latter is obtained via the measurement of the source size of the x rays emitted by the accelerating electron bunch in the bubble. We measure a normalized rms beam transverse emittance < 0.5 pi mm mrad as an upper limit for a spatially Gaussian, spectrally quasimonoenergetic electron beam with 230 MeV energy in agreement with numerical modeling and analytic theory in the bubble regime
Using electron bunches generated by laser wakefield acceleration as a probe, the temporal evolution of magnetic fields generated by a 4 × 10(19) W/cm(2) ultrashort (30 fs) laser pulse focused on solid density targets is studied experimentally. Magnetic field strengths of order B(0) ~ 10(4) T are observed expanding at close to the speed of light from the interaction point of a high-contrast laser pulse with a 10-μm-thick aluminum foil to a maximum diameter of ~1 mm. The field dynamics are shown to agree with particle-in-cell simulations.
Theoretical study of heavy ion acceleration from ultrathin (<200 nm) gold foils irradiated by a short pulse laser is presented. Using two dimensional particle-in-cell simulations the time history of the laser bullet is examined in order to get insight into the laser energy deposition and ion acceleration process. For laser pulses with intensity
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