Laser technologies for laser accelerators
Abstract
The primary result of the work reported is the determination of laser system architectures that satsify the requirements of high luminosity, high energy (about 1 TeV), electron accelerators. It has been found that high laser efficiency is a very hard driver for these accelerators as the total average laser output optical power is likely to fall above 10 MW. The luminosity requires rep rates in the kHz range, and individual pulse lengths in the 1 to 10 psec range are required to satisfy acceleration gradient goals. CO2 and KrF lasers were chosen for study because of their potential to simultaneously satisfy the given requirements. Accelerator luminosity is reviewed, and requirements on laser system average power and rep rate are determined as a function of electron beam bunch parameters. Laser technologies are reviewed, including CO2, excimers, solid state, and free electron lasers. The proposed accelerator mechanisms are summarized briefly. Work on optical transport geometries for near and far field accelerators are presented. Possible exploitation of the CO2 and DrF laser technology to generate the required pulse lengths, rep rates, and projected efficiencies is illustrated and needed development work is suggested. Initial efforts at developing a 50 GeV benchmark conceptual design and a 100 MeV demonstration experiment conceptual design are presented.
- Publication:
-
Annual Report Spectra Technology
- Pub Date:
- May 1985
- Bibcode:
- 1985sti..reptT.....
- Keywords:
-
- Design Analysis;
- Electron Accelerators;
- Laser Applications;
- Standards;
- Carbon Dioxide Lasers;
- Free Electron Lasers;
- Laser Outputs;
- Luminosity;
- Solid State Lasers;
- Lasers and Masers