Testing strong-field QED with the avalanche precursor
A. A. Mironov, S. S. Bulanov, A. Di Piazza, M. Grech, L. Lancia, S. Meuren, J. Palastro, C. Riconda, H. G. Rinderknecht, P. Tzeferacos, and G. Gregori

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates through simulations that upcoming high-power laser facilities can reliably trigger and observe QED avalanches, revealing new insights into strong-field quantum electrodynamics and particle cascade phenomena.
Contribution
It shows that QED avalanche precursors can be reliably initiated with realistic laser parameters at the NSF OPAL facility, advancing experimental exploration of strong-field QED effects.
Findings
QED avalanche precursors can be triggered with realistic laser setups
Distinct particle distribution signatures indicate transition to QED cascades
Efficient seed electron injection methods identified for cascade initiation
Abstract
A two-beam high-power laser facility is essential for the study of one of the most captivating phenomena predicted by strong-field quantum electrodynamics (QED) and yet unobserved experimentally: the avalanche-type cascade. In such a cascade, the energy of intense laser light can be efficiently transformed into high-energy radiation and electron-positron pairs. The future 50-petawatt-scale laser facility NSF OPAL will provide unique opportunities for studying such strong-field QED effects, as it is designed to deliver two ultra-intense, tightly focused laser pulses onto the interaction point. In this work, we investigate the potential of such a facility for studying elementary particle and plasma dynamics deeply in the quantum radiation-dominated regime, and the generation of QED avalanches. With 3D particle-in-cell simulations, we demonstrate that QED avalanche precursors can be…
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