15–20 Jun 2014
Laurentian University / Université Laurentienne
America/Toronto timezone
Welcome to the 2014 CAP Congress! / Bienvenue au congrès de l'ACP 2014!

Femtosecond few-hundreds-of-keV electron pulses from direct laser acceleration in a low-density gas

17 Jun 2014, 13:45
30m
C-301 (Laurentian University / Université Laurentienne)

C-301

Laurentian University / Université Laurentienne

Sudbury, Ontario
Invited Speaker / Conférencier invité Plasma Physics / Physique des plasmas (DPP) (T2-8) Plasma Physics and Applications - DPP / Physique et applications des plasmas - DPP

Speaker

Dr Charles Varin (Université d'Ottawa)

Description

Subrelativistic electrons are a valuable tool for high-resolution atomic and molecular imaging. In particular, electron pulses with energies ranging from 50 to 300 keV have been successfully used in time-resolved ultrafast electron diffraction (UED) experiments to probe physical phenomena on a subpicosecond time scale. Laser-driven electron acceleration has been proposed as an alternative to the static accelerator technology currently in use. In principle, it has several advantages : (i) the short wavelength of the accelerating field may lead to electron bunches with duration of the order of 10 fs or less; (ii) there is an intrinsic synchronization between the electron probe and the laser pump; and (iii) using a gas medium, the electron source is self-regenerating and could be used for UED experiments at high repetition rates. Recently, using three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations, we showed that 240-keV electron pulses with 1-fs initial duration and 5% energy spread could be produced by radially polarized laser pulses focused in a low-density hydrogen gas [Marceau, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 224801 (2013)]. The latest results suggest that 100-500 keV energy with similar duration is within reach of the actual laser technology.

Primary author

Mr Vincent Marceau (Université Laval)

Co-authors

Dr Charles Varin (Université d'Ottawa) Prof. Michel Piché (Université Laval) Prof. Thomas Brabec (Université d'Ottawa)

Presentation materials

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