Probing Strong-Field QED via Angle-Discriminated Emissions from Electrons Traversing Colliding Laser Pulses
C. Olofsson, A. Gonoskov

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel laser-electron collider setup with angle-based discrimination to study strong-field QED at high quantum parameters, improving signal detection and reducing background noise.
Contribution
It introduces a collider geometry using multiple focused laser pulses and phase/polarization control to enable high-$$ QED studies with enhanced signal discrimination.
Findings
Helical electron motion correlates deflection angle with field strength.
Four circularly polarized pulses enable near-perfect angle discrimination.
Simulation results support the feasibility of the proposed experimental layout.
Abstract
Future laser-electron colliders will reach quantum parameters well in excess of unity, enabling studies of strong-field QED in extreme regimes. However, statistical inference in such experiments requires mitigating premature radiative losses of electrons to enable high- QED events, as well as separating the detectable signal of these events from that of lower- particles and photons produced by QED cascades. We propose a collider geometry in which electrons traverse the waist of two or four perpendicularly propagating, tightly focused laser pulses. This configuration suppresses both outlined difficulties by leveraging the short interaction length of the waist, rather than relying on the more technically demanding reduction of pulse duration. Moreover, altering the phase and polarization of each pulse causes the electrons to undergo helical motion where the deflection…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLaser-Plasma Interactions and Diagnostics · Particle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Laser-Matter Interactions and Applications
