Laser Wakefield Particle Accelerator Realized
deglr6328 writes "Researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Lab's "l'OASIS" group have, for the first time, discovered a way to create high quality monochromatic beams of relativistic electrons using a 10 terawatt laser pulse focused on a specially formed plasma channel. The work is considered a landmark in new accelerator physics due to the fact that they are theoretically capable of creating extraordinarily high field accelerating gradients in the 100's of GeV per meter range; much higher than what's possible with the current gradients created by microwave frequency accelerators. The discovery could therefore open the door to far more efficient and compact staged particle accelerators utilizing next generation petawatt power lasers to achieve TeV scale particle energies and at lower energies, allow things like proton beam cancer therapy to be made affordable and widely available."
You lost me at hello
10 Terawatt laser? This is really a diversion to fund laser weapons research. I mean, what do you think a phase conjugate tracking system is *FOR*?
include $sig;
1;
..a way to make popcorn from orbit!
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0089886/
now we'll start tying the universe into carrick knots and wind up relying on a Neanderthal space man to save us.
What I want to see is some of these babies aimed at giant solar sails which provide accelration to a spaceship ...
I see on the TV screens how hard it is.
Particle accelerators use electric fields to accelerate charged particles to high speed. Normally you literally have a set of electrodes producing the field. This makes for a bulky device, because you're limited in how close together electrodes can be that have a given voltage difference (due to hardware constraints).
Laser wakefield acceleration is one of a family of acceleration schemes that work by making a disturbance in a plasma, and using the ripples in that to accelerate charged particles. These ripples can be thought of as being similar to sound waves, but because plasma consists of charged particles, you get voltage differences between the peaks and troughs. Laser wakefield acceleration (and beat-wave acceleration and particle wakefield acceleration and so forth) use these voltage differences to accelerate particles (the usual analogy is to say that the accelerated particles are "surfing" on the slope of a moving wave, picking up speed the whole time).
The advantage of plasma accelerator schemes is that the voltage gradients are much steeper than in conventional accelerators (large voltage change in a very short distance). This means that as long as you can keep them behaving nicely, you can use a plasma accelerator that fits on a tabletop to produce particle energies you'd otherwise need a huge linear accelerator to generate.
Unlike conventional accelerators, there's no easy way to chain plasma accelerators together to get arbitrary energies. This is being worked on. They're also working on using better lasers to create larger plasma disturbances and get single-stage accelerators to work better; that's the focus of this article.
Now, the Star Trek terms:
This means that all of the accelerated particles wind up at more or less the same energy, instead of being at different energies. The analogy is with monochromatic light (all photons at the same energy, and hence colour).
Electron accelerated to energies much higher than its rest mass. For an electron, this means they're above the 1 MeV range. For a proton, it would be above the GeV range. For relativistic heavy ions (e.g. the ones in the RHIC device), it's the TeV range.
At ultrarelativistic speeds, particles are travelling almost exactly at the speed of light, which makes accelerator design a bit easier.
The area in the plasma where the laser has passed, and conditions are right for acceleration. This is a cylindrical channel, usually.
How much voltage changes with distance. This determines the acceleration felt by the particles you're driving, which tells you how big a device you need to reach a given energy or what particle energy you can expect to get out of a given device.
Units in which acceleration gradient is measured.
A particle accelerator that's small (this is the advantage of plasma accelerators), and that use multiple stages to reach higher energies than any single acceleration stage could. This is tricky to do with plasma accelerators, but not impossible. Very handy if you can get it working reliably for hundreds of stages.
These are the ultra-short-pulse, high-energy lasers you may have been hearing about. Right now, you can get off the shelf systems that dump a few joules of energy into a pulse less than a picosecond long. Power during the pulse is in the terawatt range (which is why these are called "T3 / Table-Top Terawatt" lasers). Having a short, sharp pulse instead of a long, drawn-out one makes laser wakefield acceleration work better. The next generation of ultra-short-pulse laser delivers higher power in an even shorter time. The goal is to get petawatt power du
Science an be good sometimes, but don't we have enough already?
So we shouldn't be working on accelerators that let us perform anti-cancer therapy more easily?
(I know, IHBT; this is just an exceptionally silly troll.)
Compact accelerators could be a huge, paradign shifting win for fusion power.
I read about this idea in Scientific American in the 70s! (Way back before that magazine turned into Discover-like fluff.)
Imagine this technology being used to build an accelerator that is more powerful, smaller, and cheaper than Europe's LHC. Maybe we dodged a bullet by killing the Supercollider project?
have you always been as imbecillic as you are now or is this a recent change for you
There's an Arthur C. Clarke book that said this would happen. Talked about some huge round accelerator that was never built due to funding and how pissed all the physicists were. Then linear accelerators were invented that were alot more powerfull and alot cheaper. "It would have been a mistake, but it would have been thier mistake."