Highly spin-polarized multi-GeV electron beams generated by single-species plasma photocathodes
read the original abstract
High-gradient and high-efficiency acceleration in plasma-based accelerators has been demonstrated, showing its potential as the building block for a future collider operating at the energy frontier of particle physics. However, generating and accelerating the required spin-polarized beams in such a collider using plasma-based accelerators has been a long-standing challenge. Here we show that the passage of a highly relativistic, high-current electron beam through a single-species (ytterbium) vapor excites a nonlinear plasma wake by primarily ionizing the two outer 6s electrons. Further photoionization of the resultant Yb2+ ions by a circularly polarized laser injects the 4f14 electrons into this wake generating a highly spin-polarized beam. Combining time-dependent Schrodinger equation simulations with particle-in-cell simulations, we show that a sub-femtosecond, high-current (4 kA) electron beam with up to 56% net spin polarization can be generated and accelerated to 15 GeV in just 41 cm. This relatively simple scheme solves the perplexing problem of producing spin-polarized relativistic electrons in plasma-based accelerators.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
-
Wake Perturbations in Laser- and Beam-Driven Plasma Wakefield Accelerators: A Symmetry-Based Multipole Classification
The paper introduces a symmetry-based multipole classification (m=1 for centroid motion, m=2 for cross-plane emittance coupling) that unifies discussion of wake perturbations and beam-quality issues across LWFA and PWFA.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.