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Free-electron lasing with compact beam-driven plasma wakefield accelerator. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Plasma-based technology can accelerate electron beams to ultra-relativistic speeds over short distances, enabling compact particle accelerators that could fit on a tabletop.
  • These accelerators have the potential to power free-electron lasers (FELs), which produce precise light pulses for investigating matter at the sub-atomic level.
  • A recent experiment demonstrated successful FEL lasing using a 3-cm particle-beam-driven plasma accelerator, confirming the viability and high quality of this technology for future user-oriented applications.

Article Abstract

The possibility to accelerate electron beams to ultra-relativistic velocities over short distances by using plasma-based technology holds the potential for a revolution in the field of particle accelerators. The compact nature of plasma-based accelerators would allow the realization of table-top machines capable of driving a free-electron laser (FEL), a formidable tool to investigate matter at the sub-atomic level by generating coherent light pulses with sub-ångström wavelengths and sub-femtosecond durations. So far, however, the high-energy electron beams required to operate FELs had to be obtained through the use of conventional large-size radio-frequency (RF) accelerators, bound to a sizeable footprint as a result of their limited accelerating fields. Here we report the experimental evidence of FEL lasing by a compact (3-cm) particle-beam-driven plasma accelerator. The accelerated beams are completely characterized in the six-dimensional phase space and have high quality, comparable with state-of-the-art accelerators. This allowed the observation of narrow-band amplified radiation in the infrared range with typical exponential growth of its intensity over six consecutive undulators. This proof-of-principle experiment represents a fundamental milestone in the use of plasma-based accelerators, contributing to the development of next-generation compact facilities for user-oriented applications.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-04589-1DOI Listing

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