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Petawatt Laser Achieves Record Power

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BERKELEY, Calif., Aug. 1, 2012 — The Berkeley Lab Laser Accelerator (BELLA) laser system has generated a record petawatt of power in a pulse just 40 fs long at a pulse rate of 1 Hz — one pulse every second.

The BELLA design is based on years of laser plasma accelerator research performed by the US Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory’s Accelerator and Fusion Research Div.’s (AFRD) Lasers and Optical Accelerator Systems Integrated Studies (LOASIS) program. In contrast to conventional accelerators, laser plasma accelerators produce electron density waves that move through a plasma, using laser beams to either heat and drill through a plume of gas or moving through plasma enclosed in a thin capillary in a crystalline block such as sapphire. Some of the plasma’s free electrons are trapped by the waves, accelerating them to very high energies within very short lengths.


The BELLA laser during construction. In the foreground, units of the front end stretch and amplify short, relatively weak laser pulses before further amplification in the long central chamber. Amplification is done by titanium sapphire crystals boosted by a dozen pump lasers. At the far end of the hall, the now highly energetic stretched pulse is compressed before being directed to BELLA’s electron-beam accelerator component. (Image: Roy Kaltschmidt, LBNL)

The first high-quality electron beams of 100 MeV were reported by LOASIS in 2004, followed by the first beam of 1 GeV in a 3.3-cm-long sapphire block in 2006.

The laser is expected to be the first plasma accelerator to produce a beam of electrons with an energy of 10 GeV. Unlike the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) — which achieved 50 GeV electron beams with traditional technology using a linear accelerator 2 miles long — the BELLA accelerator measures only 1 mile long and is supported by its laser system in an adjacent room.

PI Physik Instrumente - Microscope Stages MR ROS 11/24


Simulation of a laser wake field accelerator: Bunches of electrons (yellow and green) are injected and accelerated by surfing the plasma waves (blue surfaces) generated by a laser pulse. (Simulation: Cameron Geddes, LOASIS Program at NERSC)

The scientists have demonstrated the laser’s compressed output energy of 42.4 J in about 40 fs at 1 Hz. Its initial 1 PW of peak power is twice that of lasers capable of generating more intense pulses than those used by the entire US “at any instant time.” BELLA’s average power is just 42.4 W, the typical power for a household lightbulb. By packing the modest average power into a very short pulse, this high peak power can be achieved.

The laser system, developed by Thales of France, is fully integrated with Berkeley Lab equipment and personnel protection systems. Experiments to demonstrate BELLA’s ability to attain 10 GeV beams will begin this fall.

“BELLA will be an exceptional tool for advancing the physics of laser and matter interactions,” said Wim Leemans of Berkeley Lab’s AFRD, who conceived the laser system in 2006. “The laser’s peak power will give us access to new regimes, such as developing compact particle accelerators for high-energy physics, and tabletop free electron lasers for investigating materials and biological systems.”

For more information, visit: www.lbl.gov

Published: August 2012
Glossary
laser plasma
A plasma produced by the interaction of an intense laser pulse with a material surface. Production of ionized particle with high intensity radiation. The narrow path of the intense field produces a plasma channel. The LIPC (laser-induced plasma channel) laser has been adapted towards electroshock weapons as well as induced lightning.
photonics
The technology of generating and harnessing light and other forms of radiant energy whose quantum unit is the photon. The science includes light emission, transmission, deflection, amplification and detection by optical components and instruments, lasers and other light sources, fiber optics, electro-optical instrumentation, related hardware and electronics, and sophisticated systems. The range of applications of photonics extends from energy generation to detection to communications and...
sapphire
Sapphire refers to a crystalline form of aluminum oxide (Al2O3) that is used in various optical and photonic applications due to its exceptional optical, mechanical, and thermal properties. Sapphire is transparent over a wide range of wavelengths, from ultraviolet (UV) to near-infrared (NIR), making it suitable for optical components and devices operating in these spectral regions. In photonics, sapphire is utilized in several ways: Optical windows and lenses: Sapphire is used to...
Accelerator and Fusion Research DivisionAFRDAmericasBasic ScienceBELLABELLA laserBerkeley LabBerkeley Lab Laser AcceleratorCaliforniacrystalline blockDepartment of EnergyenergyEuropeFrancehigh-energy physicslaser and matter interactionlaser plasmalaser plasma acceleratorLasers and Optical Accelerator Systems Integrated Studies programLawrence Berkeley National LaboratoryLOASISpetawatt laserphotonicsResearch & TechnologysapphireSLACStanford Linear Accelerator Centertabletop free electron lasersThalesWim LeemansLasers

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