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Dive into the research topics where Longqing Yi is active.

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Featured researches published by Longqing Yi.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Effect of pulse profile and chirp on a laser wakefield generation

Xiaomei Zhang; Baifei Shen; Liangliang Ji; Wenpeng Wang; Jiancai Xu; Yahong Yu; Longqing Yi; Xiaofeng Wang; Nasr A. M. Hafz; Victor V. Kulagin

A laser wakefield driven by an asymmetric laser pulse with/without chirp is investigated analytically and through two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations. For a laser pulse with an appropriate pulse length compared with the plasma wavelength, the wakefield amplitude can be enhanced by using an asymmetric un-chirped laser pulse with a fast rise time; however, the growth is small. On the other hand, the wakefield can be greatly enhanced for both positively chirped laser pulse having a fast rise time and negatively chirped laser pulse having a slow rise time. Simulations show that at the early laser-plasma interaction stage, due to the influence of the fast rise time the wakefield driven by the positively chirped laser pulse is more intense than that driven by the negatively chirped laser pulse, which is in good agreement with analytical results. At a later time, since the laser pulse with positive chirp exhibits opposite evolution to the one with negative chirp when propagating in plasma, the wakefield in the latter case grows more intensely. These effects should be useful in laser wakefield acceleration experiments operating at low plasma densities.


Physical Review Special Topics-accelerators and Beams | 2013

Scheme for proton-driven plasma-wakefield acceleration of positively charged particles in a hollow plasma channel

Longqing Yi; Baifei Shen; K. V. Lotov; Liangliang Ji; Xiaomei Zhang; Wenpeng Wang; Xueyan Zhao; Yahong Yu; Jiancai Xu; Xiaofeng Wang; Yin Shi; Lingang Zhang; Tongjun Xu; Zhizhan Xu

A new scheme for accelerating positively charged particles in a plasma wakefield accelerator is proposed. If the proton drive beam propagates in a hollow plasma channel, and the beam radius is of order of the channel width, the space charge force of the driver causes charge separation at the channel wall, which helps to focus the positively charged witness bunch propagating along the beam axis. In the channel, the acceleration buckets for positively charged particles are much larger than in the blowout regime of the uniform plasma, and stable acceleration over long distances is possible. In addition, phasing of the witness with respect to the wave can be tuned by changing the radius of the channel to ensure the acceleration is optimal. Two dimensional simulations suggest that, for proton drivers likely available in future, positively charged particles can be stably accelerated over 1 km with the average acceleration gradient of 1.3 GeV/m.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Positron acceleration in a hollow plasma channel up to TeV regime

Longqing Yi; Baifei Shen; Liangliang Ji; K. V. Lotov; Alexander Sosedkin; XiaomeiZhang; Wenpeng Wang; Jiancai Xu; Yin Shi; Lingang Zhang; Zhizhan Xu

Nowadays, humans understanding of the fundamental physics is somehow limited by the energy that our high energy accelerators can afford. Up to 4 TeV protons are realized in the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Leptons, such as electrons and positrons, however gained energies of about 100 GeV or less. Multi-TeV lepton accelerators are still lacking due to the relatively low acceleration gradient of conventional methods, which may induce unbearable cost. On the other hand, plasmas have shown extraordinary potential in accelerating electrons and ions, providing orders of magnitude higher acceleration fields of 10–100 GV/m. In such context, we propose a plasma-based high-energy lepton accelerator, in which a weakly focusing plasma structure is formed near the beam axis. The structure preserves the emittance of the accelerated beam and produces low radiation losses. Moreover, the structure allows for a considerable decrease of the witness energy spread at the driver depletion stage.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Cascaded target normal sheath acceleration

Wenpeng Wang; Baifei Shen; Xiaomei Zhang; Xiaofeng Wang; J. C. Xu; Xiao-ying Zhao; Yingxin Yu; Longqing Yi; Yuejiang Shi; Ling Zhang; T. J. Xu; Z. Z. Xu

A cascaded target normal sheath acceleration (TNSA) scheme is proposed to simultaneously increase energy and improve energy spread of a laser-produced mono-energetic proton beam. An optimum condition that uses the maximum sheath field to accelerate the center of the proton beam is theoretically found and verified by two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations. An initial 10 MeV proton beam is accelerated to 21 MeV with energy spread decreased from 5% to 2% under the optimum condition during the process of the cascaded TNSA. The scheme opens a way to scale proton energy lineally with laser energy.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Cascaded proton acceleration by collisionless electrostatic shock

T. J. Xu; B. Shen; Xiaomei Zhang; Longqing Yi; Wenpeng Wang; Ling Zhang; J. C. Xu; Xiao-ying Zhao; Yuejiang Shi; Cong Liu; Zhikun Pei

A new scheme for proton acceleration by cascaded collisionless electrostatic shock (CES) is proposed. By irradiating a foil target with a moderate high-intensity laser beam, a stable CES field can be induced, which is employed as the accelerating field for the booster stage of proton acceleration. The mechanism is studied through simulations and theoretical analysis, showing that a 55 MeV seed proton beam can be further accelerated to 265 MeV while keeping a good energy spread. This scheme offers a feasible approach to produce proton beams with energy of hundreds of MeV by existing available high-intensity laser facilities.


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Generation of gamma-ray beam with orbital angular momentum in the QED regime

Chen Liu; Baifei Shen; Xiaomei Zhang; Yin Shi; Liangliang Ji; Wenpeng Wang; Longqing Yi; Lingang Zhang; Tongjun Xu; Zhikun Pei; Zhizhan Xu

We propose a scheme to generate gamma-ray photons with an orbital angular momentum (OAM) and high energy simultaneously from laser-plasma interactions by irradiating a circularly polarized Laguerre-Gaussian laser on a thin plasma target. The spin angular momentum and OAM are first transferred to electrons from the driving laser photons, and then the OAM is transferred to the gamma-ray photons from the electrons through quantum radiation. This scheme has been demonstrated using three-dimensional quantum electrodynamics particle-in-cell simulation. The topological charge, chirality and carrier-envelope phase of the short ultra-intense vortex laser can be revealed according to the pattern feature of the energy density of radiated photons.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Cascaded radiation pressure acceleration

Zhikun Pei; Baifei Shen; Xiaomei Zhang; Wenpeng Wang; Lingang Zhang; Longqing Yi; Yin Shi; Zhizhan Xu

A cascaded radiation-pressure acceleration scheme is proposed. When an energetic proton beam is injected into an electrostatic field moving at light speed in a foil accelerated by light pressure, protons can be re-accelerated to much higher energy. An initial 3-GeV proton beam can be re-accelerated to 7 GeV while its energy spread is narrowed significantly, indicating a 4-GeV energy gain for one acceleration stage, as shown in one-dimensional simulations and analytical results. The validity of the method is further confirmed by two-dimensional simulations. This scheme provides a way to scale proton energy at the GeV level linearly with laser energy and is promising to obtain proton bunches at tens of gigaelectron-volts.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Direct acceleration of electrons by a CO2 laser in a curved plasma waveguide

Longqing Yi; A. Pukhov; Baifei Shen

Laser plasma interaction with micro-engineered targets at relativistic intensities has been greatly promoted by recent progress in the high contrast lasers and the manufacture of advanced micro- and nano-structures. This opens new possibilities for the physics of laser-matter interaction. Here we propose a novel approach that leverages the advantages of high-pressure CO2 laser, laser-waveguide interaction, as well as micro-engineered plasma structure to accelerate electrons to peak energy greater than 1 GeV with narrow slice energy spread (~1%) and high overall efficiency. The acceleration gradient is 26 GV/m for a 1.3 TW CO2 laser system. The micro-bunching of a long electron beam leads to the generation of a chain of ultrashort electron bunches with the duration roughly equal to half-laser-cycle. These results open a way for developing a compact and economic electron source for diverse applications.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

High quality electron bunch generation with CO2-laser-plasma interaction

Lingang Zhang; Baifei Shen; Jiancai Xu; Liangliang Ji; Xiaomei Zhang; Wenpeng Wang; Xueyan Zhao; Longqing Yi; Yahong Yu; Yin Shi; Tongjun Xu; Zhizhan Xu

CO2 laser-driven electron acceleration in low-density plasma is demonstrated using particle-in-cell simulation. An intense CO2 laser pulse of long wavelength excites a wake bubble that has a large elongated volume for accelerating a large number of electrons before reaching the charge saturation limit. A transversely injected laser pulse is used to induce and control the electron injection. It is found that an electron bunch with total charge up to 10 nC and absolute energy spread less than 16 MeV can be obtained. As a result, the charge per energy interval of the bunch reaches up to 0.6 nC/MeV. Intense CO2-laser based electron acceleration can provide a new direction for generating highly charged electron bunches with low energy spread, which is of much current interest, especially for table-top X-ray generation.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Enhanced high harmonic generation and the phase effect in double-sided relativistic laser-foil interaction

Yahong Yu; Baifei Shen; Liangliang Ji; Xiaomei Zhang; Wenpeng Wang; Xueyan Zhao; Xiaofeng Wang; Longqing Yi; Yin Shi; Tongjun Xu; Lingang Zhang; Zhizhan Xu

High harmonic generation (HHG) from relativistic laser-foil interaction is investigated analytically and through particle-in-cell simulations. Previous work has shown that when two counter-propagating circularly polarized (CP) laser pulses interact with a thin foil, electrons can be well confined spatially to form a high density layer. The layer electrons oscillate in certain transversal direction and radiate intense high order harmonics. It is demonstrated here that there is a critical foil thickness, only below which can high harmonics be generated efficiently. Furthermore, to enhance the intensity in higher order region, the third linearly polarized (LP) short-wavelength laser pulse with much lower intensity is introduced. Analysis and simulations both show that the enhancement is determined by the relative phase δϕ between the driving CP laser pulses and LP pulse. The enhancement at high order is quite considerable and very sensitive to the relative phase δϕ, thus offering not only a way to efficientl...

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Baifei Shen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wenpeng Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiaomei Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Liangliang Ji

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yin Shi

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiaofeng Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Lingang Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jiancai Xu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zhizhan Xu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Tongjun Xu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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