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Laser-plasma accelerators: a new tool for science and for society

V Malka et al 2005 Plasma Phys. Control. Fusion 47 B481-B490   doi: 10.1088/0741-3335/47/12B/S34  Help

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V Malka, J Faure, Y Glinec and A F Lifschitz
Laboratoire d'Optique Appliquée, Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Techniques Avancées, Ecole Polytechnique, (UMR 7639 du CNRS), 91761 Palaiseau, France
E-mail: victor.malka@ensta.fr

Abstract. The recent and continuous development of powerful laser systems has permitted the emergence of new approaches for generating energetic electron beams. By focusing light pulses containing a few joules of energy in a few tens of femtoseconds onto gas jets, extremely large electric fields can be generated, reaching the terravolts per metre level. Such fields are 10 000 times greater than those produced in the radio-frequency cavities of conventional accelerators. As a result, the length over which electrons extracted from the target can be accelerated to hundreds of MeV is reduced to a few millimetres. The reduction of the size and the cost of laser-plasma accelerators is a promising consequence, but these electron beams also reveal original properties, which make them a wonderful tool for science. By adjusting the interaction parameters, the electron energy distribution can be tuned from a maxwellian-like distribution to a quasi-monoenergetic one. The new properties of these laser-based particle beams are well suited to many applications in different fields, including medicine (radiotherapy), chemistry (ultrafast radiolysis), material science (non-destructive material inspection using radiography) and, of course, for accelerator physics.

Print publication: Issue 12B (December 2005)
Received 1 July 2005
Published 8 November 2005

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