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The effects of temporal pulse shape on laser wakefield accelerators: preliminary results

POSTER

Abstract

It is generally assumed that the most desirable laser pulse for laser wakefield accelerators (LWFA) is one that is Fourier transform limited (FTL). Such a pulse minimizes the duration of the pulse, thus maximizing the pulse peak intensity, and creates a pulse shape that is symmetric in the time domain. However, recent studies have shown that laser pulses that are carefully shaped in the temporal regime can significantly enhance the resultant radiation of LWFA, such as increasing the maximum energy of photons by 50% [1] or the electron beam charge by 80% [2]. To further our understanding of the interaction between the pulse shape and laser driven plasmas, the recently developed direct phase control (DPC) method [3] for pulse shaping was used in conjunction with particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations of LWFA. This presentation will briefly address how the DPC pulse shaping method works before focusing on preliminary results of the PIC simulations and the possible physical mechanisms that explain the enhancements seen from the pulse shaping.

Publication: 1. Sladkov, A., et al., Effect of a Femtosecond-Scale Temporal Structure of a Laser Driver on Generation of Betatron Radiation by Wakefield Accelerated Electrons. Photonics, 2023. 10(2): p. 108<br>2. Shalloo, R.J. et al., Automation and control of laser wakefield accelerators using Bayesian optimization. Nature Communications, 2020. 11(1): p. 6355.<br>3. Buczek, S., et al., High-resolution direct phase control in the spectral domain in ultrashort pulse lasers for pulse-shaping applications. Journal of Instrumentation, 2025. 20(5): p. 05002<br>

Presenters

  • Sean M Buczek

    General Atomics; UC San Diego

Authors

  • Sean M Buczek

    General Atomics; UC San Diego

  • Gilbert Collins

    General Atomics

  • Qian Qian

  • Kyle Glen Miller

    Laboratory for Laser Energetics (LLE)

  • Alec G.R. GR Thomas

    Michigan University

  • Alexey Arefiev

    University of California, San Diego

  • Mario Manuel

    General Atomics