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Dive into the research topics where K. A. Marsh is active.

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Featured researches published by K. A. Marsh.


ADVANCED ACCELERATOR CONCEPTS: Eleventh Advanced Accelerator Concepts Workshop | 2004

Simulation of a 50GeV PWFA Stage

C. Huang; W. Lu; M. Zhou; Viktor K. Decyk; W. B. Mori; E. Oz; C.D. Barnes; C. E. Clayton; F.-J. Decker; S. Deng; M. J. Hogan; R. Iverson; D. K. Johnson; C. Joshi; T. Katsouleas; P. Krejcik; K. A. Marsh; P. Muggli; C. O’Connell; D. Walz

The plasma afterburner has been proposed as a possible advanced acceleration scheme for a future linear collider. In this concept, a high energy electron(or positron) drive beam from an existing linac such as the SLC will propagate in a plasma section of density about one order of magnitude lower than the peak beam density. The particle beam generates a strong plasma wave wakefield which has a phase velocity equal to the velocity of the beam and this wakefield can be used to accelerate part of the drive beam or a trailing beam. Several issues such as the efficient transfer of energy and the stable propagation of the particle beam in the plasma are critical to the afterburner concept. We investigate the nonlinear beam‐plasma interactions in such scenario using a new 3D particle‐in‐cell code called QuickPIC. Preliminary simulation results for electron acceleration, beam‐loading and hosing instability will be presented.


Physics of Plasmas | 1994

Acceleration and scattering of injected electrons in plasma beat wave accelerator experiments

C. E. Clayton; M. Everett; A. Lal; Daniel Gordon; K. A. Marsh; C. Joshi

The results from experiments in which a two‐frequency CO2 laser is used to beat‐excite large‐amplitude, relativistic electron plasma waves in a tunnel‐ionized plasma are reported. The plasma wave is diagnosed by injecting a beam of 2 MeV electrons and observing the energy gain and loss of these electrons, as well as the scattering and deflection of the transmitted electrons near 2 MeV. Accelerated electrons up to 30 MeV have been observed. The lifetime of the accelerating structure as seen by small‐angle Thomson scattering is about 100 ps, whereas the injected electrons are seen to be scattered or deflected by the plasma for several ns, with diffuse scattering occurring 0.5–1 ns after forming the plasma wave and whole beam deflection occurring at later times. A simple model, which includes laser focusing, ionization, transit time, and relativistic saturation effects, suggests that the wave coherence may be short lived while the wave fields themselves persist for a longer time. This may be the reason for t...


Physics of Plasmas | 2002

High energy density plasma science with an ultrarelativistic electron beam

C. Joshi; B. Blue; C. E. Clayton; E. S. Dodd; C. Huang; K. A. Marsh; W. B. Mori; S. Wang; M. J. Hogan; C. O’Connell; Robert H. Siemann; D. Watz; P. Muggli; T. Katsouleas; S. Lee

An intense, high-energy electron or positron beam can have focused intensities rivaling those of today’s most powerful laser beams. For example, the 5 ps (full-width, half-maximum), 50 GeV beam at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) at 1 kA and focused to a 3 micron rms spot size gives intensities of >1020 W/cm−2 at a repetition rate of >10 Hz. Unlike a ps or fs laser pulse which interacts with the surface of a solid target, the particle beam can readily tunnel through tens of cm of steel. However, the same particle beam can be manipulated quite effectively by a plasma that is a million times less dense than air! This is because of the incredibly strong collective fields induced in the plasma by the Coulomb force of the beam. The collective fields in turn react back onto the beam leading to many clearly observable phenomena. The beam paraticles can be: (1) Deflected leading to focusing, defocusing, or even steering of the beam; (2) undulated causing the emission of spontaneous betatron x-ray rad...


IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science | 1999

Photo-ionized lithium source for plasma accelerator applications

P. Muggli; K. A. Marsh; S. Wang; C. E. Clayton; S. Lee; T. Katsouleas; C. Joshi

A photo-ionized lithium source is developed for plasma acceleration applications. A homogeneous column of lithium neutral vapor with a density of 2/spl times/10/sup 15-3/ is confined by helium gas in a heat-pipe oven. A UV laser pulse ionizes the vapor. In this device, the length of the neutral vapor and plasma column is 25 cm. The plasma density was measured by laser interferometry in the visible on the lithium neutrals and by CO/sub 2/ laser interferometry on the plasma electrons. The maximum measured plasma density was 2.9/spl times/10/sup 14/ cm/sup -3/, limited by the available UV fluence (/spl ap/83 mJ/cm/sup 2/), corresponding to a 15% ionization fraction. After ionization, the plasma density decreases by a factor of two in about 12 /spl mu/s. These results show that such a plasma source is scaleable to lengths of the order of 1 m and should satisfy all the requirements for demonstrating the acceleration of electrons by 1 GeV in a 1-GeV/m amplitude plasma wake.


Physics of Plasmas | 1997

Second harmonic generation and its interaction with relativistic plasma waves driven by forward Raman instability in underdense plasmas

Victor Malka; A. Modena; Z. Najmudin; A. E. Dangor; C. E. Clayton; K. A. Marsh; C. Joshi; C. Danson; D. Neely; F. N. Walsh

High conversion efficiency (0.1%) into second harmonic light generated in the interaction of a short-pulse intense laser with underdense plasma has been observed. In this experiment the plasma is created by optical field ionization of hydrogen or helium gas. Second harmonic spectra observed in the forward direction show Stokes and anti-Stokes satellites. This is due to the interaction of the second harmonic light with large-amplitude relativistic plasmawaves. Second harmonic images taken at 30° from the propagation axis show that the radiation is generated over a length of a few times the Rayleigh length and that the origin of the second harmonic light is due to the radial electron density gradients created by the ionization process and the radial ponderomotive force.


Nature | 2015

Multi-gigaelectronvolt acceleration of positrons in a self-loaded plasma wakefield

S. Corde; E. Adli; J. Allen; Weiming An; Christine Clarke; C. E. Clayton; Jean-Pierre Delahaye; J. Frederico; Spencer Gessner; Selina Green; M.J. Hogan; C. Joshi; Nate Lipkowitz; M. Litos; W. Lu; K. A. Marsh; W. B. Mori; Margaux Schmeltz; N. Vafaei-Najafabadi; D. Walz; V. Yakimenko; Gerald Yocky

Electrical breakdown sets a limit on the kinetic energy that particles in a conventional radio-frequency accelerator can reach. New accelerator concepts must be developed to achieve higher energies and to make future particle colliders more compact and affordable. The plasma wakefield accelerator (PWFA) embodies one such concept, in which the electric field of a plasma wake excited by a bunch of charged particles (such as electrons) is used to accelerate a trailing bunch of particles. To apply plasma acceleration to electron–positron colliders, it is imperative that both the electrons and their antimatter counterpart, the positrons, are efficiently accelerated at high fields using plasmas. Although substantial progress has recently been reported on high-field, high-efficiency acceleration of electrons in a PWFA powered by an electron bunch, such an electron-driven wake is unsuitable for the acceleration and focusing of a positron bunch. Here we demonstrate a new regime of PWFAs where particles in the front of a single positron bunch transfer their energy to a substantial number of those in the rear of the same bunch by exciting a wakefield in the plasma. In the process, the accelerating field is altered—‘self-loaded’—so that about a billion positrons gain five gigaelectronvolts of energy with a narrow energy spread over a distance of just 1.3 metres. They extract about 30 per cent of the wake’s energy and form a spectrally distinct bunch with a root-mean-square energy spread as low as 1.8 per cent. This ability to transfer energy efficiently from the front to the rear within a single positron bunch makes the PWFA scheme very attractive as an energy booster to an electron–positron collider.


IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science | 1996

Observation of Raman forward scattering and electron acceleration in the relativistic regime

A. Modena; Z. Najmudin; A. E. Dangor; C. E. Clayton; K. A. Marsh; C. Joshi; Victor Malka; C.B. Darrow; C. Danson

Raman forward scattering (RFS) is observed in the interaction of a high intensity (>10/sup 18/ W/cm/sup 2/) short pulse (<1 ps) laser with an underdense plasma (n/sub e//spl sim/10/sup 19/ cm/sup -3/). Electrons are trapped and accelerated up to 44 MeV by the high-amplitude plasma wave produced by RFS. The laser spectrum is strongly modulated by the interaction, showing sidebands at the plasma frequency. Furthermore, as the quiver velocity of the electrons in the high electric field of the laser beam becomes relativistic, various effects are observed which can be attributed to the variation of electron mass with laser intensity.


Physics of Plasmas | 2000

E-157: A 1.4-m-long plasma wake field acceleration experiment using a 30 GeV electron beam from the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center Linac

M.J. Hogan; R. Assmann; Franz-Josef Decker; R. Iverson; P. Raimondi; Sayed Rokni; Robert H. Siemann; D. Walz; David H. Whittum; Brent Edward Blue; C. E. Clayton; Evan Stuart Dodd; Roy Gerrit Hemker; C. Joshi; K. A. Marsh; Warren B. Mori; S. Wang; T. Katsouleas; Seung Seo Lee; P. Muggli; P. Catravas; S. Chattopadhyay; E. Esarey; Wim Leemans

In the E-157 experiment now being conducted at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, a 30 GeV electron beam of 2×1010 electrons in a 0.65-mm-long bunch is propagated through a 1.4-m-long lithium plasma of density up to 2×1014 e−/cm3. The initial beam density is greater than the plasma density, and the head of the bunch expels the plasma electrons leaving behind a uniform ion channel with transverse focusing fields of up to several thousand tesla per meter. The initial transverse beam size with σ=50–100 μm is larger than the matched size of 5 μm resulting in up to three beam envelope oscillations within the plasma. Time integrated optical transition radiation is used to study the transverse beam profile immediately before and after the plasma and to characterize the transverse beam dynamics as a function of plasma density. The head of the bunch deposits energy into plasma wakes, resulting in longitudinal accelerating fields which are witnessed by the tail of the same bunch. A time-resolved Cherenkov imag...


Optics Letters | 1999

Generation of 160-ps terawatt-power CO2 laser pulses

S. Ya. Tochitsky; R. Narang; C. Filip; C. E. Clayton; K. A. Marsh; C. Joshi

We have developed a three-stage CO(2) master-oscillator-amplifier system that produces 1.1 TW of peak power. The system generates 170 J of energy in a diffraction-limited 160+/-10ps pulse on the 10P(20) line. We also report the realization of a two-wavelength terawatt-peak-power CO(2) laser that can be tuned to an arbitrary pair of lines. A two-stage semiconductor switching system driven by a picosecond-pulse Nd:YAG laser was used to slice a short, low-power 10.6-mum pulse for amplification. A simple plasma shutter helped to compensate for gain narrowing in a final three-pass amplifier and to shorten the pulse.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2014

Role of direct laser acceleration in energy gained by electrons in a laser wakefield accelerator with ionization injection

Jessica Shaw; Frank Tsung; N. Vafaei-Najafabadi; K. A. Marsh; N. Lemos; W. B. Mori; C. Joshi

We have investigated the role that the transverse electric field of the laser plays in the acceleration of electrons in a laser wakefield accelerator operating in the quasi-blowout regime through particle-in-cell code simulations. In order to ensure that longitudinal compression and/or transverse focusing of the laser pulse is not needed before the wake can self-trap the plasma electrons, we have employed the ionization injection technique. Furthermore, the plasma density is varied such that at the lowest densities, the laser pulse occupies only a fraction of the first wavelength of the wake oscillation (the accelerating bucket), whereas at the highest density, the same duration laser pulse fills the entire first bucket. Although the trapped electrons execute betatron oscillations due to the ion column in all cases, at the lowest plasma density they do not interact with the laser field and the energy gain is all due to the longitudinal wakefield. However, as the density is increased, there can be a significant contribution to the maximum energy due to direct laser acceleration (DLA) of those electrons that undergo betatron motion in the plane of the polarization of the laser pulse. Eventually, DLA can be the dominant energy gain mechanism over acceleration due to the longitudinal field at the highest densities.

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C. Joshi

University of California

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C. E. Clayton

University of California

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W. B. Mori

University of California

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P. Muggli

University of Southern California

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R. Iverson

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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W. Lu

University of California

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M.J. Hogan

University of California

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