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Dive into the research topics where E. Guillaume is active.

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Featured researches published by E. Guillaume.


Nature Communications | 2015

Demonstration of relativistic electron beam focusing by a laser-plasma lens

C. Thaury; E. Guillaume; A. Döpp; R. Lehe; Agustin Lifschitz; K. Ta Phuoc; J. Gautier; Jean-Philippe Goddet; Amar Tafzi; Alessandro Flacco; F. Tissandier; S. Sebban; Antoine Rousse; Victor Malka

Laser-plasma technology promises a drastic reduction of the size of high-energy electron accelerators. It could make free-electron lasers available to a broad scientific community and push further the limits of electron accelerators for high-energy physics. Furthermore, the unique femtosecond nature of the source makes it a promising tool for the study of ultrafast phenomena. However, applications are hindered by the lack of suitable lens to transport this kind of high-current electron beams mainly due to their divergence. Here we show that this issue can be solved by using a laser-plasma lens in which the field gradients are five order of magnitude larger than in conventional optics. We demonstrate a reduction of the divergence by nearly a factor of three, which should allow for an efficient coupling of the beam with a conventional beam transport line.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Electron Rephasing in a Laser-Wakefield Accelerator

E. Guillaume; A. Döpp; C. Thaury; K. Ta Phuoc; A. Lifschitz; Gabriele Grittani; J. P. Goddet; Amar Tafzi; Shao-Wei Chou; Laszlo Veisz; Victor Malka

An important limit for energy gain in laser-plasma wakefield accelerators is the dephasing length, after which the electron beam reaches the decelerating region of the wakefield and starts to decelerate. Here, we propose to manipulate the phase of the electron beam in the wakefield, in order to bring the beam back into the accelerating region, hence increasing the final beam energy. This rephasing is operated by placing an upward density step in the beam path. In a first experiment, we demonstrate the principle of this technique using a large energy spread electron beam. Then, we show that it can be used to increase the energy of monoenergetic electron beams by more than 50%.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Shock assisted ionization injection in laser-plasma accelerators

C. Thaury; E. Guillaume; A. Lifschitz; K. Ta Phuoc; Martin Hansson; Gabriele Grittani; J. Gautier; J. P. Goddet; Amar Tafzi; Olle Lundh; Victor Malka

Ionization injection is a simple and efficient method to trap an electron beam in a laser plasma accelerator. Yet, because of a long injection length, this injection technique leads generally to the production of large energy spread electron beams. Here, we propose to use a shock front transition to localize the injection. Experimental results show that the energy spread can be reduced down to 10 MeV and that the beam energy can be tuned by varying the position of the shock. This simple technique leads to very stable and reliable injection even for modest laser energy. It should therefore become a unique tool for the development of laser-plasma accelerators.


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Energy boost in laser wakefield accelerators using sharp density transitions

A. Döpp; E. Guillaume; C. Thaury; Agustin Lifschitz; K. Ta Phuoc; Victor Malka

The energy gain in laser wakefield accelerators is limited by dephasing between the driving laser pulse and the highly relativistic electrons in its wake. Since this phase depends on both the driver and the cavity length, the effects of dephasing can be mitigated with appropriate tailoring of the plasma density along propagation. Preceding studies have discussed the prospects of continuous phase-locking in the linear wakefield regime. However, most experiments are performed in the highly non-linear regime and rely on self-guiding of the laser pulse. Due to the complexity of the driver evolution in this regime it is much more difficult to achieve phase locking. As an alternative we study the scenario of rapid rephasing in sharp density transitions, as was recently demonstrated experimentally. Starting from a phenomenological model we deduce expressions for the electron energy gain in such density profiles. The results are in accordance with particle-in-cell simulations and we present gain estimations for single and multiple stages of rephasing.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Stable multi-GeV electron accelerator driven by waveform-controlled PW laser pulses

Hyung Taek Kim; Vishwa Bandhu Pathak; Ki Hong Pae; Agustin Lifschitz; F. Sylla; Jung Hun Shin; Calin Hojbota; Seong Ku Lee; Jae Hee Sung; Hwang Woon Lee; E. Guillaume; C. Thaury; Kazuhisa Nakajima; Jorge Vieira; L. O. Silva; Victor Malka; Chang Hee Nam

The achievable energy and the stability of accelerated electron beams have been the most critical issues in laser wakefield acceleration. As laser propagation, plasma wave formation and electron acceleration are highly nonlinear processes, the laser wakefield acceleration (LWFA) is extremely sensitive to initial experimental conditions. We propose a simple and elegant waveform control method for the LWFA process to enhance the performance of a laser electron accelerator by applying a fully optical and programmable technique to control the chirp of PW laser pulses. We found sensitive dependence of energy and stability of electron beams on the spectral phase of laser pulses and obtained stable 2-GeV electron beams from a 1-cm gas cell of helium. The waveform control technique for LWFA would prompt practical applications of centimeter-scale GeV-electron accelerators to a compact radiation sources in the x-ray and γ-ray regions.


Light-Science & Applications | 2017

Stable femtosecond X-rays with tunable polarization from a laser-driven accelerator

A. Döpp; B. Mahieu; Agustin Lifschitz; C. Thaury; Antoine Doche; E. Guillaume; Gabriele Grittani; Olle Lundh; Martin Hansson; J. Gautier; M. Kozlova; Jean Philippe Goddet; Pascal Rousseau; Amar Tafzi; Victor Malka; Antoine Rousse; S. Corde; Kim Ta Phuoc

Technology based on high-peak-power lasers has the potential to provide compact and intense radiation sources for a wide range of innovative applications. In particular, electrons that are accelerated in the wakefield of an intense laser pulse oscillate around the propagation axis and emit X-rays. This betatron source, which essentially reproduces the principle of a synchrotron at the millimeter scale, provides bright radiation with femtosecond duration and high spatial coherence. However, despite its unique features, the usability of the betatron source has been constrained by its poor control and stability. In this article, we demonstrate the reliable production of X-ray beams with tunable polarization. Using ionization-induced injection in a gas mixture, the orbits of the relativistic electrons emitting the radiation are reproducible and controlled. We observe that both the signal and beam profile fluctuations are significantly reduced and that the beam pointing varies by less than a tenth of the beam divergence. The polarization ratio reaches 80%, and the polarization axis can easily be rotated. We anticipate a broad impact of the source, as its unprecedented performance opens the way for new applications.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2016

An all-optical Compton source for single-exposure x-ray imaging

A. Döpp; E. Guillaume; C. Thaury; J. Gautier; I Andriyash; Agustin Lifschitz; Victor Malka; A Rousse; K. Ta Phuoc

All-optical Compton sources are innovative, compact devices to produce high energy femtosecond x-rays. Here we present results on a single-pulse scheme that uses a plasma mirror to reflect the drive beam of a laser plasma accelerator and to make it collide with the highly-relativistic electrons in its wake. The accelerator is operated in the self-injection regime, producing quasi-monoenergetic electron beams of around 150 MeV peak energy. Scattering with the intense femtosecond laser pulse leads to the emission of a collimated high energy photon beam. Using continuum-attenuation filters we measure significant signal content beyond 100 keV and with simulations we estimate a peak photon energy of around 500 keV. The source divergence is about 13 mrad and the pointing stability is 7 mrad. We demonstrate that the photon yield from the source is sufficiently high to illuminate a centimeter-size sample placed 90 centimeters behind the source, thus obtaining radiographs in a single shot.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2017

Stable, polarized betatron raditation: x-ray absorption spectroscopy in WDM unveiling ultrafast electron heating (Conference Presentation)

B. Mahieu; Andreas S. Doepp; Agustin Lifschitz; Antoine Doche; C. Thaury; S. Corde; J. Gautier; E. Guillaume; Victor Malka; Antoine Rousse; Noémie Jourdain; Ludovic Lecherbourg; F. Dorchies; Kim Ta Phuoc

Betatron radiation from laser-plasma accelerators reproduces the principle of a synchrotron on a millimeter scale, but featuring femtosecond duration. Here we present the outcome of our latest developments, which now allow us to produce stable and polarized X-ray bursts. Moreover, the X-ray polarization can simply be adjusted by tuning the polarization of the laser driving the process. The excellent stability of the source is expressed in terms of pointing, flux, transverse distribution and critical energy of the spectrum. These combined features make our betatron source particularly suitable for applications in ultrafast X-ray science. In this presentation we will describe the generation process, relying on the ionization injection scheme for laser-plasma acceleration. We will show experimental measurements, numerical results and first applications in time-resolved spectroscopy.


Physical Review Special Topics-accelerators and Beams | 2014

Laser-plasma lens for laser-wakefield accelerators

R. Lehe; C. Thaury; E. Guillaume; A. Lifschitz; Victor Malka


Physical Review Special Topics-accelerators and Beams | 2015

Physics of fully-loaded laser-plasma accelerators

E. Guillaume; A. Döpp; C. Thaury; Agustin Lifschitz; J. P. Goddet; Amar Tafzi; F. Sylla; G. Iaquanello; T. Lefrou; P. Rousseau; K. Ta Phuoc; Victor Malka

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C. Thaury

Université Paris-Saclay

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Victor Malka

Université Paris-Saclay

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A. Döpp

Université Paris-Saclay

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J. P. Goddet

Université Paris-Saclay

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