Alexander Henderson
Rice University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Alexander Henderson.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Edison P. Liang; Taylor Clarke; Alexander Henderson; Wen Fu; W. Lo; Devin Taylor; Petr Chaguine; Shaochuan Zhou; Y. Hua; X. Cen; Xin Wang; J. Kao; H. Hasson; G. Dyer; Kristina Serratto; Nathan Riley; Michael Donovan; T. Ditmire
We report results of new pair creation experiments using ~100 Joule pulses of the Texas Petawatt Laser to irradiate solid gold and platinum targets, with intensities up to ~1.9 × 1021 W.cm−2 and pulse durations as short as ~130 fs. Positron to electron (e+/e−) ratios >15% were observed for many thick disk and rod targets, with the highest e+/e− ratio reaching ~50% for a Pt rod. The inferred pair yield was ~ few ×1010 with emerging pair density reaching ~1015/cm3 so that the pair skin depth becomes < pair jet transverse size. These results represent major milestones towards the goal of creating a significant quantity of dense pair-dominated plasmas with e+/e− approaching 100% and pair skin depth ≪ pair plasma size, which will have wide-ranging applications to astrophysics and fundamental physics.
Medical Physics | 2015
David J. McLaughlin; Kenneth R. Hogstrom; Robert L. Carver; J Gibbons; Polad M. Shikhaliev; Kenneth L. Matthews; Taylor Clarke; Alexander Henderson; Edison P. Liang
PURPOSE The purpose of this work was to adapt a lightweight, permanent magnet electron energy spectrometer for the measurement of energy spectra of therapeutic electron beams. METHODS An irradiation geometry and measurement technique were developed for an approximately 0.54-T, permanent dipole magnet spectrometer to produce suitable latent images on computed radiography (CR) phosphor strips. Dual-pinhole electron collimators created a 0.318-cm diameter, approximately parallel beam incident on the spectrometer and an appropriate dose rate at the image plane (CR strip location). X-ray background in the latent image, reduced by a 7.62-cm thick lead block between the pinhole collimators, was removed using a fitting technique. Theoretical energy-dependent detector response functions (DRFs) were used in an iterative technique to transform CR strip net mean dose profiles into energy spectra on central axis at the entrance to the spectrometer. These spectra were transformed to spectra at 95-cm source to collimator distance (SCD) by correcting for the energy dependence of electron scatter. The spectrometer was calibrated by comparing peak mean positions in the net mean dose profiles, initially to peak mean energies determined from the practical range of central-axis percent depth-dose (%DD) curves, and then to peak mean energies that accounted for how the collimation modified the energy spectra (recalibration). The utility of the spectrometer was demonstrated by measuring the energy spectra for the seven electron beams (7-20 MeV) of an Elekta Infinity radiotherapy accelerator. RESULTS Plots of DRF illustrated their dependence on energy and position in the imaging plane. Approximately 15 iterations solved for the energy spectra at the spectrometer entrance from the measured net mean dose profiles. Transforming those spectra into ones at 95-cm SCD increased the low energy tail of the spectra, while correspondingly decreasing the peaks and shifting them to slightly lower energies. Energy calibration plots of peak mean energy versus peak mean position of the net mean dose profiles for each of the seven electron beams followed the shape predicted by the Lorentz force law for a uniform z-component of the magnetic field, validating its being modeled as uniform (0.542 ± 0.027 T). Measured Elekta energy spectra and their peak mean energies correlated with the 0.5-cm (7-13 MeV) and the 1.0-cm (13-20 MeV) R90 spacings of the %DD curves. The full-width-half-maximum of the energy spectra decreased with decreasing peak mean energy with the exception of the 9-MeV beam, which was anomalously wide. Similarly, R80-20 decreased linearly with peak mean energy with the exception of the 9 MeV beam. Both were attributed to suboptimal tuning of the high power phase shifter for the recycled radiofrequency power reentering the traveling wave accelerator. CONCLUSIONS The apparatus and analysis techniques of the authors demonstrated that an inexpensive, lightweight, permanent magnet electron energy spectrometer can be used for measuring the electron energy distributions of therapeutic electron beams (6-20 MeV). The primary goal of future work is to develop a real-time spectrometer by incorporating a real-time imager, which has potential applications such as beam matching, ongoing beam tune maintenance, and measuring spectra for input into Monte Carlo beam calculations.
Medical Physics | 2012
Kenneth R. Hogstrom; D McLaughlin; J Gibbons; P Shikhaliev; Taylor Clarke; Alexander Henderson; D Taylor; Petr Shagin; Edison P. Liang
PURPOSE To demonstrate how a small magnetic spectrometer can measure the energy spectra of seven electron beams on an Elekta Infinity tuned to match beams on a previously commissioned machine. METHODS Energyspectra were determined from measurements of intensity profiles on 6″-long computed radiographic (CR) strips after deflecting a narrow incident beam using a small (28 lbs.), permanent magnetic spectrometer. CR plateexposures (<1cGy) required special beam reduction techniques and bremsstrahlung shielding. Curves of CR intensity (corrected for non- linearity and background) versus position were transformed into energy spectra using the transformation from position (x) on the CR plate to energy (E) based on the Lorentz force law. The effective magnetic field and its effective edge, parameters in the transformation, were obtained by fitting a plot of most probable incident energy (determined from practical range) to the peak position. RESULTS The calibration curve (E vs. x) fit gave 0.423 Tesla for the effective magnetic field. Most resulting energy spectra were characterized by a single, asymmetric peak with peak position and FWHM increasing monotonically with beam energy. Only the 9-MeV spectrum was atypical, possibly indicating suboptimal beam tuning. These results compared well with energy spectra independently determined by adjusting each spectrum until the EGSnrc Monte Carlo calculated percent depth-dose curve agreed well with the corresponding measured curve. CONCLUSIONS Results indicate that this spectrometer and methodology could be useful for measuring energy spectra of clinical electron beams at isocenter. Future work will (1) remove the small effect of the detector response function (due to pinhole size and incident angular spread) from the energy spectra, (2) extract the energy spectra exiting the accelerator from current results, (3) use the spectrometer to compare energy spectra of matched beams among our clinical sites, and (4) modify the spectrometer to utilize radiochromic film.
High Energy Density Physics | 2014
Alexander Henderson; Edison P. Liang; Nathan Riley; P. Yepes; Gillis Dyer; Kristina Serratto; Petr Shagin
Astrophysics and Space Science | 2011
Alexander Henderson; Edison P. Liang; P. Yepes; H. Chen; S. C. Wilks
High Energy Density Physics | 2013
Devin Taylor; Edison P. Liang; Taylor Clarke; Alexander Henderson; Petr Chaguine; Xin Wang; G. Dyer; Kristina Serratto; Nathan Riley; Michael Donovan; T. Ditmire
Robotic Telescopes, Student Research and Education Proceedings, Vol 1, No 1 | 2018
Richard Olenick; Arthur Sweeney; Laura Aumen; Ramses Gonzalez; Alexander Henderson; Mark A. Rodriguez; Philip Lenzen; John Paul Jones
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Edison P. Liang; Willie Lo; Hannah Hasson; G. Dyer; Taylor Clarke; Fabio Fasanelli; Kelly Yao; Ilija Marchenka; Alexander Henderson; Andriy Dashko; Yuling Zhang; T. Ditmire
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Alexander Henderson; Richard Olenick; Arthur Sweeney; Ramses Gonzales; Tommy Byrd
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Edison P. Liang; Alexander Henderson; Wen Fu; Taylor Clarke; Devin Taylor; Willie Lo; Petr Chaguine; Hannah Hasson; Gillis Dyer; Kristina Serratto; Nathan Riley; Michael Donovan; T. Ditmire