Whitepaper submitted to Snowmass21: Advanced accelerator linear collider demonstration facility at intermediate energy
C. Benedetti, S. S. Bulanov, E. Esarey, C. G. R. Geddes A. J., Gonsalves, P. M. Jacobs, S. Knapen, B. Nachman, K. Nakamura, S. Pagan Griso,, C. B. Schroeder, D. Terzani, J. van Tilborg, M. Turner, W.-M. Yao, R., Bernstein, V. Shiltsev, S. J. Gessner, M. J. Hogan, T. Nelson

TL;DR
This paper discusses the development of an intermediate energy advanced accelerator linear collider to test high-gradient acceleration technologies for future high-energy lepton colliders, with potential applications in particle physics research.
Contribution
It proposes a 20-100 GeV ANA-based collider as an intermediate facility to demonstrate advanced acceleration concepts and explore various physics phenomena.
Findings
Progress in laser-powered electron acceleration techniques.
Feasibility of a 20-100 GeV collider for technology testing.
Potential for new physics studies and applications.
Abstract
It is widely accepted that the next lepton collider beyond a Higgs factory would require center-of-mass energy of the order of up to 15 TeV. Since, given reasonable space and cost restrictions, conventional accelerator technology reaches its limits near this energy, high-gradient advanced acceleration concepts are attractive. Advanced and novel accelerators (ANAs) are leading candidates due to their ability to produce acceleration gradients on the order of 1--100~GV/m, leading to compact acceleration structures. Over the last 10-15 years significant progress has been achieved in accelerating electron beams by ANAs. For example, the demonstration of several-GeV electron beams from laser-powered capillary discharge waveguides, as well as the proof-of-principle coupling of two accelerating structures powered by different laser pulses, has increased interest in ANAs as a viable technology…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Particle accelerators and beam dynamics · Pulsed Power Technology Applications
