Laser wakefield simulation using a speed-of-light frame envelope model
POSTER
Abstract
Simulation of laser wakefield accelerator (LWFA) experiments is computationally highly intensive due to the disparate length scales involved. Current experiments extend hundreds of laser wavelengths transversely and many thousands in the propagation direction, making explicit PIC simulations enormously expensive and requiring massively parallel execution in 3D. We can substantially improve the performance of laser wakefield simulations by modeling the envelope modulation of the laser field rather than the field itself. This allows for much coarser grids, since we need only resolve the plasma wavelength and not the laser wavelength, and therefore larger timesteps. Thus an envelope model can result in savings of several orders of magnitude in computational resources. By propagating the laser envelope in a Galilean frame moving at the speed of light, dispersive errors can be avoided and simulations over long distances become possible. Here we describe the model and its implementation, and show simulations of laser wakefield phenomena such as channel propagation, self-focusing, wakefield generation, and downramp injection using the model.
Authors
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Benjamin Cowan
Tech-X, Tech-X Corporation
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David Bruhwiler
Tech-X, Tech-X Corporation
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Peter Messmer
Tech-X Corporation
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Kevin Paul
Tech-X, Tech-X Corporation
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Cameron Geddes
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Eric Esarey
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Estelle Cormier-Michel
University of Nevada, Reno