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Dive into the research topics where Mark Hogan is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark Hogan.


arXiv: Accelerator Physics | 2013

A Beam Driven Plasma-Wakefield Linear Collider: From Higgs Factory to Multi-TeV

E. Adli; Jean-Pierre Delahaye; Spencer Gessner; Mark Hogan; T. Raubenheimer; Weiming An; C. Joshi; W. B. Mori

Plasma wakefield acceleration (PWFA) holds much promise for advancing the energy frontier because it can potentially provide a 1000-fold or more increase in acceleration gradient with excellent power efficiency in respect with standard technologies. Most of the advances in beam-driven plasma wakefield acceleration were obtained by a UCLA/USC/SLAC collaboration working at the SLAC FFTB[ ]. These experiments have shown that plasmas can accelerate and focus both electron and positron high energy beams, and an accelerating gradient in excess of 50 GeV/m can be sustained in an 85 cm-long plasma. The FFTB experiments were essentially proof-of-principle experiments that showed the great potential of plasma accelerators. The FACET[ ] test facility at SLAC will in the period 2012-2016 further study several issues that are directly related to the applicability of PWFA to a high-energy collider, in particular two-beam acceleration where the witness beam experiences high beam loading (required for high efficiency), small energy spread and small emittance dilution (required to achieve luminosity). The PWFA-LC concept presented in this document is an attempt to find the best design that takes advantage of the PWFA, identify the critical parameters to be achieved and eventually the necessary R&D to address their feasibility. It best benefits from the extensive R&D that has been performed for conventional rf linear colliders during the last twenty years, especially ILC[ ] and CLIC[ ], with a potential for a comparably lower power consumption and cost.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Physics of Phase Space Matching for Staging Plasma and Traditional Accelerator Components Using Longitudinally Tailored Plasma Profiles

X. L. Xu; Jianfei Hua; Y. P. Wu; C. J. Zhang; F. Li; Y. Wan; Chih-Hao Pai; Wei Lu; Weiming An; Peicheng Yu; Mark Hogan; C. Joshi; W. B. Mori

Phase space matching between two plasma-based accelerator (PBA) stages and between a PBA and a traditional accelerator component is a critical issue for emittance preservation. The drastic differences of the transverse focusing strengths as the beam propagates between stages and components may lead to a catastrophic emittance growth even when there is a small energy spread. We propose using the linear focusing forces from nonlinear wakes in longitudinally tailored plasma density profiles to control phase space matching between sections with negligible emittance growth. Several profiles are considered and theoretical analysis and particle-in-cell simulations show how these structures may work in four different scenarios. Good agreement between theory and simulation is obtained, and it is found that the adiabatic approximation misses important physics even for long profiles.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2014

Laser ionized preformed plasma at FACET

Selina Green; E. Adli; Christine Clarke; S. Corde; S A Edstrom; A S Fisher; J. Frederico; J C Frisch; Spencer Gessner; S Gilevich; P Hering; Mark Hogan; R K Jobe; M. Litos; J E May; D. Walz; V. Yakimenko; C. E. Clayton; C. Joshi; K. A. Marsh; N. Vafaei-Najafabadi; P. Muggli

The Facility for Advanced Accelerator and Experimental Tests (FACET) at SLAC installed a 10-TW Ti : sapphire laser system for pre-ionized plasma wakefield acceleration experiments. High energy (500 mJ), short (50 fs) pulses of 800 nm laser light at 1 Hz are used at the FACET experimental area to produce a plasma column. The laser pulses are stretched to 250 fs before injection into a vapor cell, where the laser is focused by an axicon lens to form a plasma column that can be sustained over the desired radius and length. A 20 GeV electron bunch interacts with this preformed plasma to generate a non-linear wakefield, thus accelerating a trailing witness bunch with gradients on the order of several GV m−1. The experimental setup and the methods for producing the pre-ionized plasma for plasma wakefield acceleration experiments performed at FACET are described.


Nature Communications | 2016

Demonstration of a positron beam-driven hollow channel plasma wakefield accelerator

Spencer Gessner; E. Adli; J. Allen; Weiming An; Christine Clarke; C. E. Clayton; S. Corde; Jean-Pierre Delahaye; J. Frederico; Selina Green; C. Hast; Mark Hogan; C. Joshi; Carl Lindstrøm; Nate Lipkowitz; M. Litos; Wei Lu; Kenneth A. Marsh; W. B. Mori; Brendan O’Shea; N. Vafaei-Najafabadi; D. Walz; V. Yakimenko; Gerald Yocky

Plasma wakefield accelerators have been used to accelerate electron and positron particle beams with gradients that are orders of magnitude larger than those achieved in conventional accelerators. In addition to being accelerated by the plasma wakefield, the beam particles also experience strong transverse forces that may disrupt the beam quality. Hollow plasma channels have been proposed as a technique for generating accelerating fields without transverse forces. Here we demonstrate a method for creating an extended hollow plasma channel and measure the wakefields created by an ultrarelativistic positron beam as it propagates through the channel. The plasma channel is created by directing a high-intensity laser pulse with a spatially modulated profile into lithium vapour, which results in an annular region of ionization. A peak decelerating field of 230 MeV m−1 is inferred from changes in the beam energy spectrum, in good agreement with theory and particle-in-cell simulations.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2016

9 GeV energy gain in a beam-driven plasma wakefield accelerator

M. Litos; E. Adli; J. Allen; Weiming An; Christine Clarke; S. Corde; C. E. Clayton; J. Frederico; Spencer Gessner; Selina Green; Mark Hogan; C. Joshi; Wei Lu; K. A. Marsh; W. B. Mori; M Schmeltz; N. Vafaei-Najafabadi; V. Yakimenko

An electron beam has gained a maximum energy of 9 GeV per particle in a 1.3 m-long electron beam-driven plasma wakefield accelerator. The amount of charge accelerated in the spectral peak was 28.3 pC, and the root-mean-square energy spread was 5.0%. The mean accelerated charge and energy gain per particle of the 215 shot data set was 115 pC and 5.3 GeV, respectively, corresponding to an acceleration gradient of 4.0 GeV/m at the spectral peak. The mean energy spread of the data set was 5.1%. These results are consistent with the extrapolation of the previously reported energy gain results using a shorter, 36 cm-long plasma source to within 10%, evincing a non-evolving wake structure that can propagate distances of over a meter in length. Wake-loading effects were evident in the data through strong dependencies observed between various spectral properties and the amount of accelerated charge.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Acceleration of a trailing positron bunch in a plasma wakefield accelerator

Antoine Doche; C. Beekman; S. Corde; J. Allen; Christine Clarke; J. Frederico; Spencer Gessner; Selina Green; Mark Hogan; Brendan O’Shea; V. Yakimenko; Weiming An; C. E. Clayton; C. Joshi; K. A. Marsh; W. B. Mori; N. Vafaei-Najafabadi; M. Litos; E. Adli; Carl Lindstrøm; Wei Lu

High gradients of energy gain and high energy efficiency are necessary parameters for compact, cost-efficient and high-energy particle colliders. Plasma Wakefield Accelerators (PWFA) offer both, making them attractive candidates for next-generation colliders. In these devices, a charge-density plasma wave is excited by an ultra-relativistic bunch of charged particles (the drive bunch). The energy in the wave can be extracted by a second bunch (the trailing bunch), as this bunch propagates in the wake of the drive bunch. While a trailing electron bunch was accelerated in a plasma with more than a gigaelectronvolt of energy gain, accelerating a trailing positron bunch in a plasma is much more challenging as the plasma response can be asymmetric for positrons and electrons. We report the demonstration of the energy gain by a distinct trailing positron bunch in a plasma wakefield accelerator, spanning nonlinear to quasi-linear regimes, and unveil the beam loading process underlying the accelerator energy efficiency. A positron bunch is used to drive the plasma wake in the experiment, though the quasi-linear wake structure could as easily be formed by an electron bunch or a laser driver. The results thus mark the first acceleration of a distinct positron bunch in plasma-based particle accelerators.


New Journal of Physics | 2010

Energy gain scaling with plasma length and density in the plasma wakefield accelerator

P. Muggli; I Blumenfeld; C. E. Clayton; F.J. Decker; Mark Hogan; C. Huang; R Ischebeck; R. Iverson; C. Joshi; T. Katsouleas; N Kirby; W. Lu; K. A. Marsh; W. B. Mori; E. Oz; R.H. Siemann; D. Walz; M. Zhou

We present plasma wakefield acceleration experimental results showing that the energy gain by 28.5GeV electrons scales with plasma length and reaches 14GeV over a plasma with a density of 2.6◊10 17 cm 3 and a length of 31cm. At this plasma density the average accelerating gradient is 36GeVm 1 . These results are in good agreement with the numbers obtained from particle in cell simulations describing the experiment. The linear scaling is also observed both at lower and higher plasma densities, at which smaller energy gains and accelerating gradients are measured. The systematic measurements of energy gain show the reproducibility and control of the acceleration process.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Ion Motion Induced Emittance Growth of Matched Electron Beams in Plasma Wakefields

Weiming An; Wei Lu; C. Huang; Xinlu Xu; Mark Hogan; C. Joshi; W. B. Mori

Plasma-based acceleration is being considered as the basis for building a future linear collider. Nonlinear plasma wakefields have ideal properties for accelerating and focusing electron beams. Preservation of the emittance of nano-Coulomb beams with nanometer scale matched spot sizes in these wakefields remains a critical issue due to ion motion caused by their large space charge forces. We use fully resolved quasistatic particle-in-cell simulations of electron beams in hydrogen and lithium plasmas, including when the accelerated beam has different emittances in the two transverse planes. The projected emittance initially grows and rapidly saturates with a maximum emittance growth of less than 80% in hydrogen and 20% in lithium. The use of overfocused beams is found to dramatically reduce the emittance growth. The underlying physics that leads to the lower than expected emittance growth is elucidated.


New Journal of Physics | 2016

Long-range attraction of an ultrarelativistic electron beam by a column of neutral plasma

E. Adli; Carl Lindstrøm; J. Allen; Christine Clarke; J. Frederico; Spencer Gessner; Selina Green; Mark Hogan; M. Litos; Brendan O’Shea; V. Yakimenko; Weiming An; C. E. Clayton; K. A. Marsh; W. B. Mori; C. Joshi; N. Vafaei-Najafabadi; S. Corde; Wei Lu

We report on the experimental observation of the attraction of a beam of ultrarelativistic electrons towards a column of neutral plasma. In experiments performed at the FACET test facility at SLAC we observe that an electron beam moving parallel to a neutral plasma column, at an initial distance of many plasma column radii, is attracted into the column. Once the beam enters the plasma it drives a plasma wake similar to that of an electron beam entering the plasma column head-on. A simple analytical model is developed in order to capture the essential physics of the attractive force. The attraction is further studied by 3D particle-in-cell numerical simulations. The results are an important step towards better understanding of particle beam–plasma interactions in general and plasma wakefield accelerator technology in particular.


ADVANCED ACCELERATOR CONCEPTS: 14th Advanced Accelerator Concepts Workshop | 2010

Drive Beam Shaping and Witness Bunch Generation for the Plasma Wakefield Accelerator

R. J. England; J. Frederico; Mark Hogan; P. Muggli; C. Joshi

High transformer ratio operation of the plasma wake field accelerator requires a tailored drive beam current profile followed by a short witness bunch. We discuss techniques for generating the requisite dual bunches and for obtaining the desired drive beam profile, with emphasis on the FACET experiment at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.

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W. B. Mori

University of California

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C. E. Clayton

University of California

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C. Joshi

University of California

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D. Walz

University of California

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