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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin M. Cowan is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin M. Cowan.


Nature | 2013

Demonstration of electron acceleration in a laser-driven dielectric microstructure

E. A. Peralta; K. Soong; R. J. England; Eric R. Colby; Z. Wu; B. Montazeri; C. McGuinness; Joshua McNeur; Kenneth J. Leedle; D. Walz; E. B. Sozer; Benjamin M. Cowan; B. Schwartz; G. Travish; Robert L. Byer

The enormous size and cost of current state-of-the-art accelerators based on conventional radio-frequency technology has spawned great interest in the development of new acceleration concepts that are more compact and economical. Micro-fabricated dielectric laser accelerators (DLAs) are an attractive approach, because such dielectric microstructures can support accelerating fields one to two orders of magnitude higher than can radio-frequency cavity-based accelerators. DLAs use commercial lasers as a power source, which are smaller and less expensive than the radio-frequency klystrons that power today’s accelerators. In addition, DLAs are fabricated via low-cost, lithographic techniques that can be used for mass production. However, despite several DLA structures having been proposed recently, no successful demonstration of acceleration in these structures has so far been shown. Here we report high-gradient (beyond 250 MeV m−1) acceleration of electrons in a DLA. Relativistic (60-MeV) electrons are energy-modulated over 563 ± 104 optical periods of a fused silica grating structure, powered by a 800-nm-wavelength mode-locked Ti:sapphire laser. The observed results are in agreement with analytical models and electrodynamic simulations. By comparison, conventional modern linear accelerators operate at gradients of 10–30 MeV m−1, and the first linear radio-frequency cavity accelerator was ten radio-frequency periods (one metre) long with a gradient of approximately 1.6 MeV m−1 (ref. 5). Our results set the stage for the development of future multi-staged DLA devices composed of integrated on-chip systems. This would enable compact table-top accelerators on the MeV–GeV (106–109 eV) scale for security scanners and medical therapy, university-scale X-ray light sources for biological and materials research, and portable medical imaging devices, and would substantially reduce the size and cost of a future collider on the multi-TeV (1012 eV) scale.


Reviews of Modern Physics | 2014

Dielectric laser accelerators

R. Joel England; Robert J. Noble; K. Bane; David H. Dowell; Cho-Kuen Ng; James E. Spencer; Sami G. Tantawi; Z. Wu; Robert L. Byer; E. A. Peralta; K. Soong; Chia-Ming Chang; B. Montazeri; Stephen J. Wolf; Benjamin M. Cowan; Jay W. Dawson; W. Gai; Peter Hommelhoff; Yen-Chieh Huang; C. Jing; C. McGuinness; Robert B. Palmer; Brian Naranjo; J. B. Rosenzweig; G. Travish; Amit Mizrahi; Levi Schächter; Christopher M. S. Sears; Gregory R. Werner; Rodney Yoder

We describe recent advances in the study of particle acceleration using dielectric near-field structures driven by infrared lasers, which we refer to as Dielectric Laser Accelerators. Implications for high energy physics and other applications are discussed.


Physical Review Special Topics-accelerators and Beams | 2008

Three-dimensional dielectric photonic crystal structures for laser-driven acceleration

Benjamin M. Cowan

We present the design and simulation of a three-dimensional photonic crystal waveguide for linear laser-driven acceleration in vacuum. The structure confines a synchronous speed-of-light accelerating mode in both transverse dimensions. We report the properties of this mode, including sustainable gradient and optical-to-beam efficiency. We present a novel method for confining a particle beam using optical fields as focusing elements. This technique, combined with careful structure design, is shown to have a large dynamic aperture and minimal emittance growth, even over millions of optical wavelengths.


Optics Letters | 2016

Demonstration of acceleration of relativistic electrons at a dielectric microstructure using femtosecond laser pulses

Kent P. Wootton; Z. Wu; Benjamin M. Cowan; Adi Hanuka; Igor Makasyuk; E. A. Peralta; K. Soong; Robert L. Byer; R. Joel England

Acceleration of electrons using laser-driven dielectric microstructures is a promising technology for the miniaturization of particle accelerators. Achieving the desired GV m-1 accelerating gradients is possible only with laser pulse durations shorter than ∼1  ps. In this Letter, we present, to the best of our knowledge, the first demonstration of acceleration of relativistic electrons at a dielectric microstructure driven by femtosecond duration laser pulses. Using this technique, an electron accelerating gradient of 690±100  MV m-1 was measured-a record for dielectric laser accelerators.


Physical Review Special Topics-accelerators and Beams | 2003

Two-Dimensional Photonic Crystal Accelerator Structures

Benjamin M. Cowan

101301-1 Photonic crystals provide a method of confining a synchronous speed-of-light mode in an alldielectric structure, likely a necessary feature in any optical accelerator. We explore computationally a class of photonic crystal structures with translational symmetry in a direction transverse to the electron beam. We demonstrate synchronous waveguide modes and discuss relevant parameters of such modes. We then explore how accelerator parameters vary as the geometry of the structure is changed and consider trade-offs inherent in the design of an accelerator of this type.


Journal of Computational Physics | 2011

Characteristics of an envelope model for laser-plasma accelerator simulation

Benjamin M. Cowan; David L. Bruhwiler; E. Cormier-Michel; E. Esarey; Cameron Geddes; Peter Messmer; Kevin Paul

Simulation of laser-plasma accelerator (LPA) experiments is computationally intensive due to the disparate length scales involved. Current experiments extend hundreds of laser wavelengths transversely and many thousands in the propagation direction, making explicit PIC simulations enormously expensive and requiring massively parallel execution in 3D. Simulating the next generation of LPA experiments is expected to increase the computational requirements yet further, by a factor of 1000. We can substantially improve the performance of LPA simulations by modeling the envelope evolution of the laser field rather than the field itself. This allows for much coarser grids, since we need only resolve the plasma wavelength and not the laser wavelength, and therefore larger timesteps can be used. Thus an envelope model can result in savings of several orders of magnitude in computational resources. By propagating the laser envelope in a Galilean frame moving at the speed of light, dispersive errors can be avoided and simulations over long distances become possible. The primary limitation to this envelope model is when the laser pulse develops large frequency shifts, and thus the slowly-varying envelope assumption is no longer valid. Here we describe the model and its implementation, and show rigorous benchmarks for the algorithm, establishing second-order convergence and correct laser group velocity. We also demonstrate simulations of LPA phenomena such as self-focusing and meter-scale acceleration stages using the model.


Prepared for 12th Advanced Accelerator Concepts Workshop (AAC 2006), Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, 10-15 Jul 2006 | 2006

Optical Damage Threshold of Silicon for Ultrafast Infrared Pulses

Benjamin M. Cowan

While silicon has several properties making it an attractive material for structure‐based laser‐driven acceleration, its optical damage threshold, a key parameter for high‐gradient acceleration, has been unknown. Here we present measurements of the optical damage threshold of crystalline silicon for ultrafast pulses in the mid‐infrared. The wavelengths tested span a range from the telecommunications band at 1550 nm extending longer toward the two‐photon absorption threshold at around 2200 nm. We discuss the prevailing theories of ultrafast optical breakdown, describe the experimental setup and preliminary results, and propose a relevant performance parameter for candidate accelerator structures.


ADVANCED ACCELERATOR CONCEPTS: Eleventh Advanced Accelerator Concepts Workshop | 2004

Photonic Crystal Laser‐Driven Accelerator Structures

Benjamin M. Cowan; M. Javanmard; N. Wu

We discuss simulated photonic crystal structure designs for laser-driven particle acceleration, focusing on three-dimensional planar structures based on the so-called “woodpile” lattice. We demonstrate guiding of a speed-of-light accelerating mode by a defect in the photonic crystal lattice and discuss the properties of this mode. We also discuss particle beam dynamics in the structure, presenting a novel method for focusing the beam. In addition we describe some potential coupling methods for the structure.


Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory | 2009

Simulating relativistic beam and plasma systems using an optimal boosted frame

J.-L. Vay; David L. Bruhwiler; Cameron Geddes; William M. Fawley; S. F. Martins; John R. Cary; E. Cormier-Michel; Benjamin M. Cowan; Ricardo Fonseca; Miguel A. Furman; Wei Lu; W. B. Mori; L. O. Silva

It was shown recently that it may be computationally advantageous to perform computer simulations in a Lorentz boosted frame for a certain class of systems. However, even if the computer model relies on a covariant set of equations, it was pointed out that algorithmic difficulties related to discretization errors may have to be overcome in order to take full advantage of the potential speedup. In this paper, we summarize the findings, the difficulties and their solutions, and review the applications of the technique that have been performed to date.


bipolar/bicmos circuits and technology meeting | 2003

Photonic crystal laser accelerator structures

Benjamin M. Cowan; Mehdi Javanmard; Robert H. Siemann

Photonic crystals have great potential for use as laser-driven accelerator structures. A photonic crystal is a dielectric structure arranged in a periodic geometry. Like a crystalline solid with its electronic band structure, the modes of a photonic crystal lie in a set of allowed photonic bands. Similarly, it is possible for a photonic crystal to exhibit one or more photonic band gaps, with frequencies in the gap unable to propagate in the crystal. Thus photonic crystals can confine an optical mode in an all-dielectric structure, eliminating the need for metals and their characteristic losses at optical frequencies. We discuss several geometries of photonic crystal accelerator structures. Photonic crystal fibers (PCFs) are optical fibers which can confine a speed-of-light optical mode in vacuum. Planar structures, both two- and three-dimensional, can also confine such a mode, and have the additional advantage that they can be manufactured using common microfabrication techniques such as those used for integrated circuits. This allows for a variety of possible materials, so that dielectrics with desirable optical and radiation-hardness properties can be chosen. We discuss examples of simulated photonic crystal structures to demonstrate the scaling laws and trade-offs involved, and touch on potential fabrication processes.

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John R. Cary

University of Colorado Boulder

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David L. Bruhwiler

University of Colorado Boulder

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E. Cormier-Michel

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Robert J. Noble

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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