The effect of a longitudinal density gradient on electron plasma wake field acceleration
David Tsiklauri (Queen Mary University of London)

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to explore how longitudinal density gradients in plasma affect electron wakefield acceleration, revealing that positive gradients enhance acceleration efficiency and electric fields, while negative gradients weaken them.
Contribution
It extends previous work by incorporating density gradients, ion motion, and fully electromagnetic effects into 3D particle-in-cell simulations of plasma wakefield acceleration.
Findings
Positive density gradients increase electric fields and energy transfer efficiency.
Negative density gradients reduce wakefield strength and acceleration.
Ion motion can significantly increase plasma ion density in wakefields.
Abstract
Three dimensional, particle-in-cell, fully electromagnetic simulations of electron plasma wake field acceleration in the blow out regime are presented. Earlier results are extended by (i) studying the effect of longitudinal density gradient; (ii) avoiding use of co-moving simulation box; (iii) inclusion of ion motion; and (iv) studying fully electromagnetic plasma wake fields. It is established that injecting driving and trailing electron bunches into a positive density gradient of ten-fold increasing density over 10 cm long Lithium vapor plasma, results in spatially more compact and three times larger, compared to the uniform density case, electric fields ( V/m), leading to acceleration of the trailing bunch up to 24.4 GeV (starting from initial 20.4 GeV), with an energy transfer efficiencies from leading to trailing bunch of 75 percent. In the uniform density case…
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