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Synchrotron x-ray radiation from laser wakefield accelerated electron beams in a plasma channel
Matsuoka, T.; Kneip, S.; McGuffey, C.; Palmer, C.; Schreiber, J.; Huntington, C.; Horovitz, Y.; Dollar, F.; Chvykov, V.; Kalintchenko, G.; Thomas, A. G. R.; Yanovsky, V.; Phuoc, K. Ta; Mangles, S. P. D.; Najmudin, Z.; Maksimchuk, A.; Krushelnick, K.
2010-08
Citation:Matsuoka, T.; Kneip, S.; McGuffey, C.; Palmer, C.; Schreiber, J.; Huntington, C.; Horovitz, Y.; Dollar, F.; Chvykov, V.; Kalintchenko, G.; Thomas, A. G. R.; Yanovsky, V.; Phuoc, K. Ta; Mangles, S. P. D.; Najmudin, Z.; Maksimchuk, A.; Krushelnick, K. (2010). "Synchrotron x-ray radiation from laser wakefield accelerated electron beams in a plasma channel." Journal of Physics: Conference Series, 244(4): 042026. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/85402>
Abstract: Synchrotron x-ray radiation from laser wakefield accelerated electron beams was characterized at the HERCULES facility of the University of Michigan. A mono-energetic electron beam with energy up to 400 MeV was observed in the interaction of an ultra-short laser pulse with a super-sonic gas jet target. The experiments were performed at a peak intensity of 5×1019 W/cm2 by using an adaptive optic. The accelerated electron beam undergoes a so called "betatron" oscillation in an ion channel, where plasma electrons have been expelled by the laser ponderomotive force, and, therefore, emits synchrotron radiation. We observe broad synchrotron x-ray radiation extending up to 30 keV. We find that this radiation is emitted in a beam with a divergence angle as small as 12×4 mrad2 and can have a source size smaller than 3 microns and a peak brightness of 1022 photons/mm2/mrad2/second/0.1% bandwidth, which is comparable to currently existing 3rd generation conventional light sources. This opens up the possibility of using laser-produced "betatron" sources for many applications that currently require conventional synchrotron sources.