Richard P. Shanks
University of Strathclyde
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Richard P. Shanks.
conference on lasers and electro optics | 2010
S. M. Wiggins; Richard P. Shanks; R. C. Issac; G. H. Welsh; M. P. Anania; E. Brunetti; G. Vieux; S. Cipiccia; B. Ersfeld; M. R. Islam; R. T. L. Burgess; G. G. Manahan; Constantin Aniculaesei; W. A. Gillespie; A. M. MacLeod; D. A. Jaroszynski
Very stable, high quality electron beams (current ∼ 10 kA, energy spread < 1%, emittance ∼ 1π mm mrad) have been generated in a laser-plasma accelerator driven by 25 TW femtosecond laser pulses.
Physical Review E | 2009
F. Wojda; K. Cassou; Guillaume Genoud; Matthias Burza; Yannick Glinec; Olle Lundh; Anders Persson; G. Vieux; E. Brunetti; Richard P. Shanks; D. A. Jaroszynski; N. E. Andreev; Claes-Göran Wahlström; B. Cros
The excitation of plasma waves over a length of up to 8 cm is demonstrated using laser guiding of intense laser pulses through hydrogen-filled glass capillary tubes. The plasma waves are diagnosed by spectral analysis of the transmitted laser radiation. The dependence of the spectral redshift-measured as a function of filling pressure, capillary tube length, and incident laser energy-is in excellent agreement with simulation results. The longitudinal accelerating field inferred from the simulations is in the range of 1-10 GV/m.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2012
S. Cipiccia; S. M. Wiggins; Richard P. Shanks; M. R. Islam; G. Vieux; R. C. Issac; E. Brunetti; B. Ersfeld; G. H. Welsh; M. P. Anania; D. Maneuski; Nuno Lemos; R. A. Bendoyro; Pattathil Rajeev; P. S. Foster; N. Bourgeois; T. Ibbotson; P. A. Walker; V. O’Shea; João Dias; D. A. Jaroszynski
The laser driven plasma wakefield accelerator is a very compact source of high energy electrons. When the quasi-monoenergetic beam from these accelerators passes through dense material, high energy bremsstrahlung photons are emitted in a collimated beam with high flux. We show how a source based on this emission process can produce more than 109 photons per pulse with a mean energy of 10 MeV. We present experimental results that show the feasibility of this method of producing high energy photons and compare the experimental results with GEANT4 Montecarlo simulations, which also give the scaling required to evaluate its suitability as method to produce radioisotopes via photo-nuclear reactions or for imaging applications.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Patience A. Cowie; Richard J. Phillips; Gerald P. Roberts; Ken McCaffrey; Leo Zijerveld; Laura C. Gregory; J.P. Faure Walker; Luke Wedmore; Tibor J. Dunai; Steven A. Binnie; Stewart P.H.T. Freeman; Klaus M. Wilcken; Richard P. Shanks; Ritske S. Huismans; Ioannis Papanikolaou; Alessandro Maria Michetti; M. Wilkinson
Many areas of the Earth’s crust deform by distributed extensional faulting and complex fault interactions are often observed. Geodetic data generally indicate a simpler picture of continuum deformation over decades but relating this behaviour to earthquake occurrence over centuries, given numerous potentially active faults, remains a global problem in hazard assessment. We address this challenge for an array of seismogenic faults in the central Italian Apennines, where crustal extension and devastating earthquakes occur in response to regional surface uplift. We constrain fault slip-rates since ~18 ka using variations in cosmogenic 36Cl measured on bedrock scarps, mapped using LiDAR and ground penetrating radar, and compare these rates to those inferred from geodesy. The 36Cl data reveal that individual faults typically accumulate meters of displacement relatively rapidly over several thousand years, separated by similar length time intervals when slip-rates are much lower, and activity shifts between faults across strike. Our rates agree with continuum deformation rates when averaged over long spatial or temporal scales (104u2009yr; 102u2009km) but over shorter timescales most of the deformation may be accommodated by <30% of the across-strike fault array. We attribute the shifts in activity to temporal variations in the mechanical work of faulting.
Nature Communications | 2016
Andrew S. Hein; Shasta M. Marrero; John Woodward; Stuart Dunning; Kate Winter; Matthew J. Westoby; Stewart P.H.T. Freeman; Richard P. Shanks; David E. Sugden
Establishing the trajectory of thinning of the West Antarctic ice sheet (WAIS) since the last glacial maximum (LGM) is important for addressing questions concerning ice sheet (in)stability and changes in global sea level. Here we present detailed geomorphological and cosmogenic nuclide data from the southern Ellsworth Mountains in the heart of the Weddell Sea embayment that suggest the ice sheet, nourished by increased snowfall until the early Holocene, was close to its LGM thickness at 10u2009ka. A pulse of rapid thinning caused the ice elevation to fall ∼400u2009m to the present level at 6.5–3.5u2009ka, and could have contributed 1.4–2u2009m to global sea-level rise. These results imply that the Weddell Sea sector of the WAIS contributed little to late-glacial pulses in sea-level rise but was involved in mid-Holocene rises. The stepped decline is argued to reflect marine downdraw triggered by grounding line retreat into Hercules Inlet.
New Journal of Physics | 2015
M. R. Islam; E. Brunetti; Richard P. Shanks; B. Ersfeld; R. C. Issac; S. Cipiccia; M. P. Anania; G. H. Welsh; S. M. Wiggins; Adam Noble; R. A. Cairns; G. Raj; D. A. Jaroszynski
The laser–plasma wakefield accelerator is a compact source of high brightness, ultra-short duration electron bunches. Self-injection occurs when electrons from the background plasma gain sufficient momentum at the back of the bubble-shaped accelerating structure to experience sustained acceleration. The shortest duration and highest brightness electron bunches result from self-injection close to the threshold for injection. Here we show that in this case injection is due to the localized charge density build-up in the sheath crossing region at the rear of the bubble, which has the effect of increasing the accelerating potential to above a critical value. Bunch duration is determined by the dwell time above this critical value, which explains why single or multiple ultra-short electron bunches with little dark current are formed in the first bubble. We confirm experimentally, using coherent optical transition radiation measurements, that single or multiple bunches with femtosecond duration and peak currents of several kiloAmpere, and femtosecond intervals between bunches, emerge from the accelerator.
New Journal of Physics | 2014
G. G. Manahan; E. Brunetti; Constantin Aniculaesei; M. P. Anania; S. Cipiccia; M. R. Islam; D. W. Grant; Anna Subiel; Richard P. Shanks; R. C. Issac; G. H. Welsh; S. M. Wiggins; D. A. Jaroszynski
Electron beams from laser-plasma wakefield accelerators have low transverse emittance, comparable to those from conventional radio frequency accelerators, which highlights their potential for applications, many of which will require the use of quadrupole magnets for optimal electron beam transport. We report on characterizing electron bunches where double bunches are observed under certain conditions. In particular, we present pepper-pot measurements of the transverse emittance of 120–200 MeV laser wakefield electron bunches after propagation through a triplet of permanent quadrupole magnets. It is shown that the normalized emittance at source can be as low as 1 π mm mrad (resolution limited), growing by about five times after propagation through the quadrupoles due to beam energy spread. The inherent energy-dependence of the magnets also enables detection of double electron bunches that could otherwise remain unresolved, providing insight into the self-injection of multiple bunches. The combination of quadrupoles and pepper-pot, in addition, acts as a diagnostic for the alignment of the magnetic triplet.
Applied Physics Letters | 2014
M. P. Anania; E. Brunetti; S. M. Wiggins; D. W. Grant; G. H. Welsh; R. C. Issac; S. Cipiccia; Richard P. Shanks; G. G. Manahan; Constantin Aniculaesei; S.B. van der Geer; M.J. de Loos; M.W. Poole; B. J. A. Shepherd; J.A. Clarke; W. A. Gillespie; A. M. MacLeod; D. A. Jaroszynski
Narrow band undulator radiation tuneable over the wavelength range of 150–260u2009nm has been produced by short electron bunches from a 2u2009mm long laser plasma wakefield accelerator based on a 20u2009TW femtosecond laser system. The number of photons measured is up to 9u2009×u2009106 per shot for a 100 period undulator, with a mean peak brilliance of 1u2009×u20091018 photons/s/mrad2/mm2/0.1% bandwidth. Simulations estimate that the driving electron bunch r.m.s. duration is as short as 3 fs when the electron beam has energy of 120–130u2009MeV with the radiation pulse duration in the range of 50–100 fs.
Physics of Plasmas | 2009
J. G. Gallacher; M. P. Anania; E. Brunetti; F. Budde; Alexander Debus; B. Ersfeld; Kerstin Haupt; M. R. Islam; O. Jäckel; Sebastian Pfotenhauer; Albert Reitsma; Erich G. Rohwer; H.-P. Schlenvoigt; Heinrich Schwoerer; Richard P. Shanks; S. M. Wiggins; D. A. Jaroszynski
In this paper a new method of determining the energy spread of a relativistic electron beam from a laser-driven plasma wakefield accelerator by measuring radiation from an undulator is presented. This could be used to determine the beam characteristics of multi-GeV accelerators where conventional spectrometers are very large and cumbersome. Simultaneous measurement of the energy spectra of electrons from the wakefield accelerator in the 55–70 MeV range and the radiation spectra in the wavelength range of 700–900 nm of synchrotron radiation emitted from a 50 period undulator confirm a narrow energy spread for electrons accelerated over the dephasing distance where beam loading leads to energy compression. Measured energy spreads of less than 1% indicates the potential of using a wakefield accelerator as a driver of future compact and brilliant ultrashort pulse synchrotron sources and free-electron lasers that require high peak brightness beams.
Conference on Harnessing Relativistic Plasma Waves as Novel Radiation Sources From Terahertz to X-Rays and Beyond | 2009
Richard P. Shanks; M. P. Anania; E. Brunetti; S. Cipiccia; B. Ersfeld; J. G. Gallacher; R. C. Issac; M. R. Islam; G. Vieux; G. H. Welsh; S. M. Wiggins; D. A. Jaroszynski
The transverse emittance is an important parameter governing the brightness of an electron beam. Here we present the first pepper-pot measurement of the transverse emittance for a mono-energetic electron beam from a laser-plasma wakefield accelerator, carried out on the Advanced Laser-Plasma High Energy Accelerators towards X-Rays (ALPHA-X) beam line. Mono-energetic electrons are passed through an array of 52 μm diameter holes in a tungsten mask. The pepper-pot results set an upper limit for the normalised emittance at 5.5 ± 1 π mm mrad for an 82 MeV beam.