论文标题
高平均功率超快激光技术,用于推动未来的高级加速器
High average power ultrafast laser technologies for driving future advanced accelerators
论文作者
论文摘要
需要大规模的激光设施来推进高能量物理和加速器物理学的能量前沿。激光等离子体加速器是旨在达到TEV电子胶合器的高级加速器概念的核心。在这些设施中,强烈的激光脉冲驱动等离子体,并用于在非常短的距离内将电子加速到高能。激光等离子体加速器原则上可以达到高能量,其加速长度比常规基于RF的加速器短1000倍。在概念上,激光驱动的粒子束能可以超越最新的传统加速器状态。 LPA在大约20 cm的情况下生产了多个GEV电子束,相对能量扩散约为2%,并由高度发达的激光技术支持。这验证了美国DOE策略的关键要素,以使此类加速器能够使未来的山着人能够启用未来的对壁,但迄今为止,将最佳结果扩展到TEV对撞机将需要具有更高平均功率的激光器。尽管目前的激光器可以实现激光驱动的colling的设想的每脉冲能量,但低激光重复速率限制了潜在的对撞机亮度。应用将需要在能量和高效率的焦耳的kHz上khz的速率,而撞机将需要大约100个这样的阶段,这是当前Hz类LPA的飞跃。这代表了激光重复率超出当前状态的挑战性1000倍。该白皮书描述了当前的研究和候选激光系统的前景,以及随附的宽带和驱动未来高级加速器所需的高伤害阈值光学器件。
Large scale laser facilities are needed to advance the energy frontier in high energy physics and accelerator physics. Laser plasma accelerators are core to advanced accelerator concepts aimed at reaching TeV electron electron colliders. In these facilities, intense laser pulses drive plasmas and are used to accelerate electrons to high energies in remarkably short distances. A laser plasma accelerator could in principle reach high energies with an accelerating length that is 1000 times shorter than in conventional RF based accelerators. Notionally, laser driven particle beam energies could scale beyond state of the art conventional accelerators. LPAs have produced multi GeV electron beams in about 20 cm with relative energy spread of about 2 percent, supported by highly developed laser technology. This validates key elements of the US DOE strategy for such accelerators to enable future colliders but extending best results to date to a TeV collider will require lasers with higher average power. While the per pulse energies envisioned for laser driven colliders are achievable with current lasers, low laser repetition rates limit potential collider luminosity. Applications will require rates of kHz to tens of kHz at Joules of energy and high efficiency, and a collider would require about 100 such stages, a leap from current Hz class LPAs. This represents a challenging 1000 fold increase in laser repetition rates beyond current state of the art. This whitepaper describes current research and outlook for candidate laser systems as well as the accompanying broadband and high damage threshold optics needed for driving future advanced accelerators.