Production of high quality electron bunches in AWAKE Run 2

Lead Research Organisation: University of Strathclyde
Department Name: Physics

Abstract

Abstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.

Planned Impact

This project is naturally a multi-disciplinary pursuit involving accelerator, plasma and particle physicists as well as engineers and technical staff. If AWAKE continues its success, this method of acceleration could provide a new cost effective route to TeV-scale colliders either of reduced length or increased energy as well as particle physics experiments requiring electrons beams of 10s of GeV. Several possible experiments have been identified which could make use of electron bunches with electrons of order 50 GeV, such as a fixed-target experiment to search for dark photons, measurements of strong-field QED through electron-laser collisions and a possible electron-proton collider.

This UK proposal is for a significant development and is wide-ranging in scope, with some equipment to be purchased from UK-based companies which could increase significantly in the future should this form of technology become a real-world solution. As we in the UK are a significant fraction of the AWAKE collaboration from the start, should the final goal be realised, there is potential for economic stimulus to the UK which building a large-scale research facility brings. This will involve the potential for large industrial contracts, training for students and other staff and knowledge exchange between academic institutes and industry arising from the R&D and the method of plasma wakefield acceleration.

The final aim of this project is to develop an accelerator technology to be used for investigation of fundamental particles and forces, however, the principle of plasma wakefield acceleration could revolutionise accelerators in general. The accelerating gradients achieved are up to three orders of magnitude higher than current techniques allowing a corresponding reduction in the size (and possibly cost) of future accelerators. This could then benefit any branch of science, health or industry which uses particle accelerators. An example is for future free electron laser facilities which could benefit significantly from this technique in which the acceleration of electrons takes place using a much shorter accelerating structure.

Diagnostic techniques developed here could be of benefit to many plasma wakefield experiments with different goals or applications. Therefore the work done here could benefit accelerators planned for other industries using the technique of plasma wakefield acceleration.

Finally, the physics behind the accelerator R&D and the final goal of the next energy-frontier collider will excite future students and captivate the public in much the same way as the Large Hadron Collider has. Having the UK as part of such cutting-edge R&D in order to be leaders of future experiments on the nature of the physical world is essential and beneficial for society. Any economic impact, as mentioned above, can only be achieved through being a strong partner. And the societal benefit of encouraging students to study physics and improving the general public's knowledge of science can best be achieved if we are part of these and future pursuits.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Collaboration partner in China 
Organisation Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Country China 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution The partner Prof. Min Chen in the School of Physics and Astronomy in Shanghai Jiao Tong University has arranged a MSc student to work on a problem related to the AWAKE Run 2 project.
Collaborator Contribution The MSc student has worked on the control of proton beam modulation in plasma by use of electron beam seeding. Some preliminary results show that electron beam seeding can enhance the modulation process and modify the phase velocity of the resulting wakefields.
Impact 1) J. Luo et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 120, 154801 (2018). 2) Q. Zhao et al., Plasma Phys. Contr. Fusion 61, 085015 (2019).
Start Year 2017
 
Description Collaboration partner in Russia 
Organisation Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics (BINP)
Country Russian Federation 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We have started collaboration with Prof. K. Lotov from Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics SB RAS, Novosibirsk, Russia, who provides the numerical simulation code LCODE. This is a quasi-static particle-in-cell code used to simulate the proton beam modulation and consequent wakefield excitation. Our staff are trained to use this code for the project.
Collaborator Contribution The partner Prof. K. Lotov from Russia provide numerical simulation code LCODE, which enables us to carry out essential numerical simulation on the problem related to the project quickly.
Impact There is not yet any ouputs resulted from this collaboration
Start Year 2020