Prospects for the production and detection of Breit-Wheeler tunneling positrons in Experiment 320 at the FACET-II accelerator
Oleksandr Borysov, Alon Levi, Sebastian Meuren, Nathaly Nofech-Mozes, Ivan Rajkovic, David A. Reis, Arka Santra, Doug W. Storey, Noam Tal Hod, Roman Urmanov

TL;DR
This paper proposes a detection method for Breit-Wheeler positrons in high-intensity laser-electron collisions, demonstrating through simulations that it can distinguish signal from background and enable spectral analysis in upcoming experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a novel detector and analysis approach adapted from high-energy physics to measure Breit-Wheeler positrons in a challenging experimental environment.
Findings
Simulations show background suppression by over an order of magnitude.
High spatial resolution enables positron momentum measurement with <2% accuracy.
Detection of single Breit-Wheeler positrons is feasible in upcoming experiments.
Abstract
The SLAC Experiment 320 collides 10 TW-class laser pulses with the high-quality, 10 GeV electron beam from the FACET-II RF LINAC. This setup is expected to produce a sizable number of pairs via nonlinear Breit-Wheeler mechanism in the strong-field tunneling regime, with an estimated yield of ~0.01-0.1 pairs per collision. This small signal rate typically comes along with large backgrounds originating, e.g., from dumping the high-charge primary beam, secondaries induced by the beam halo, as well as photons and low-energy electrons produced in the electron-laser collision itself. These backgrounds may reach densities of O(100) charged particles per cm^2 (and even more neutral particles) at the surface of the sensing elements, making it a tremendous challenge for an unambiguous detection of single particles. In this work, we demonstrate how detectors and methods adapted from…
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