A proposal for the programme of the John Adams Institute for Accelerator Science 2021-2025
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Oxford
Department Name: Oxford Physics
Abstract
The John Adams Institute for Accelerator Science (JAI) is a centre of excellence for advanced accelerator science and technology. We perform R&D and training, provide expertise, and promote accelerator applications in science and society. The JAI currently comprises 20 faculty, 23 staff, and 38 PhD students from the Physics Departments of Oxford University (UOXF), Royal Holloway University of London (RHUL), and Imperial College London (ICL). An additional 33 staff from the UK's national laboratories and CERN are affiliated with our research and teaching programmes. We have six guiding principles:
a) Develop, support and engagement of accelerator science facilities and R&D programmes of strategic importance for the UK;
b) Develop worldwide collaborations that enhance the capabilities available to us;
c) Develop novel acceleration and compact light source techniques and their applications;
d) Deliver a world leading training programme to develop the next generation of leaders in the field;
e) Communicate developments in the field to the public and decision makers;
f) Strengthen the links among the partner universities to deliver a programme that is greater than the sum of its parts.
For the period 2021-2025, we have focused on research areas that have the greatest benefit to national priorities:
Low-emittance, high-brightness electron beams, including next-generation electron-positron colliders (ILC, CLIC), the Diamond Light Source (DLS) and its upgrade, and a future UK FEL.
High-energy/high-intensity hadron beams, including current and future energy-frontier proton colliders (LHC, HL-LHC, FCC), and ISIS and its upgrade.
Advanced acceleration techniques, including laser- and beam-driven plasma-wakefield acceleration.
Particle-beam therapy applications using electron, proton and ion beams.
Through this programme we are supporting the UK's accelerator strategy by taking lead roles in both our national and overseas facilities including: DLS, ISIS and CLF at STFC/RAL, CLARA at STFC/DL, LHC, HL-LHC, CLIC, FCC and AWAKE at CERN, FLASHforward at DESY, and ATF/ATF2 at KEK.
These themes position us optimally to support our core goals of supporting major national and international accelerator developments; motivating our researchers and giving them skills in state-of-the-art technologies; and being able to transfer our knowledge to major collaborative developments and to industry.
a) Develop, support and engagement of accelerator science facilities and R&D programmes of strategic importance for the UK;
b) Develop worldwide collaborations that enhance the capabilities available to us;
c) Develop novel acceleration and compact light source techniques and their applications;
d) Deliver a world leading training programme to develop the next generation of leaders in the field;
e) Communicate developments in the field to the public and decision makers;
f) Strengthen the links among the partner universities to deliver a programme that is greater than the sum of its parts.
For the period 2021-2025, we have focused on research areas that have the greatest benefit to national priorities:
Low-emittance, high-brightness electron beams, including next-generation electron-positron colliders (ILC, CLIC), the Diamond Light Source (DLS) and its upgrade, and a future UK FEL.
High-energy/high-intensity hadron beams, including current and future energy-frontier proton colliders (LHC, HL-LHC, FCC), and ISIS and its upgrade.
Advanced acceleration techniques, including laser- and beam-driven plasma-wakefield acceleration.
Particle-beam therapy applications using electron, proton and ion beams.
Through this programme we are supporting the UK's accelerator strategy by taking lead roles in both our national and overseas facilities including: DLS, ISIS and CLF at STFC/RAL, CLARA at STFC/DL, LHC, HL-LHC, CLIC, FCC and AWAKE at CERN, FLASHforward at DESY, and ATF/ATF2 at KEK.
These themes position us optimally to support our core goals of supporting major national and international accelerator developments; motivating our researchers and giving them skills in state-of-the-art technologies; and being able to transfer our knowledge to major collaborative developments and to industry.
Organisations
Publications
Atonga E
(2023)
Gravitational waves from high-power twisted light
Howard S
(2023)
Hyperspectral Compressive Wavefront Sensing
Van De Wetering J
(2023)
Stability of the Modulator in a Plasma-Modulated Plasma Accelerator
Accettura C
(2023)
Towards a muon collider
in The European Physical Journal C
Paddock R
(2023)
Energy gain of wetted-foam implosions with auxiliary heating for inertial fusion studies
in Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
Lee J
(2023)
Toward more robust ignition of inertial fusion targets
in Physics of Plasmas
Verra L
(2023)
Development of the self-modulation instability of a relativistic proton bunch in plasma
in Physics of Plasmas
Spiers BT
(2021)
Methods for extremely sparse-angle proton tomography.
in Physical review. E
Paddock RW
(2023)
Measuring the principal Hugoniot of inertial-confinement-fusion-relevant TMPTA plastic foams.
in Physical review. E
Von Boetticher A
(2023)
Modulational instability in large-amplitude linear laser wakefields.
in Physical review. E
Jonnerby J
(2023)
Measurement of the decay of laser-driven linear plasma wakefields.
in Physical review. E
Mewes S
(2023)
Demonstration of tunability of HOFI waveguides via start-to-end simulations
in Physical Review Research
Picksley A
(2023)
All-Optical GeV Electron Bunch Generation in a Laser-Plasma Accelerator via Truncated-Channel Injection
in Physical Review Letters
Jakobsson O
(2021)
Gev-Scale Accelerators Driven by Plasma-Modulated Pulses from Kilohertz Lasers.
in Physical review letters
Von Der Leyen M
(2023)
Observation of Monoenergetic Electrons from Two-Pulse Ionization Injection in Quasilinear Laser Wakefields
in Physical Review Letters
Batsch F
(2021)
Transition between Instability and Seeded Self-Modulation of a Relativistic Particle Bunch in Plasma
in Physical Review Letters
Batsch F
(2021)
Transition between Instability and Seeded Self-Modulation of a Relativistic Particle Bunch in Plasma.
in Physical review letters
Van De Wetering J
(2024)
Multi-GeV wakefield acceleration in a plasma-modulated plasma accelerator
in Physical Review E
Feng Q
(2022)
Suprathermal electrons from the anti-Stokes Langmuir decay instability cascade
in Physical Review E
Van De Wetering J
(2023)
Stability of the modulator in a plasma-modulated plasma accelerator
in Physical Review E
Chappell J
(2021)
Experimental study of extended timescale dynamics of a plasma wakefield driven by a self-modulated proton bunch
in Physical Review Accelerators and Beams
Knetsch A
(2021)
Stable witness-beam formation in a beam-driven plasma cathode
in Physical Review Accelerators and Beams
Alejo A
(2022)
Demonstration of kilohertz operation of hydrodynamic optical-field-ionized plasma channels
in Physical Review Accelerators and Beams