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Dive into the research topics where Y. Glinec is active.

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Featured researches published by Y. Glinec.


Nature | 2004

A laser-plasma accelerator producing monoenergetic electron beams

Jérôme Faure; Y. Glinec; A. Pukhov; S. Kiselev; S. Gordienko; E. Lefebvre; Jean-Philippe Rousseau; F. Burgy; Victor Malka

Particle accelerators are used in a wide variety of fields, ranging from medicine and biology to high-energy physics. The accelerating fields in conventional accelerators are limited to a few tens of MeV m-1, owing to material breakdown at the walls of the structure. Thus, the production of energetic particle beams currently requires large-scale accelerators and expensive infrastructures. Laser–plasma accelerators have been proposed as a next generation of compact accelerators because of the huge electric fields they can sustain (>100 GeV m-1). However, it has been difficult to use them efficiently for applications because they have produced poor-quality particle beams with large energy spreads, owing to a randomization of electrons in phase space. Here we demonstrate that this randomization can be suppressed and that the quality of the electron beams can be dramatically enhanced. Within a length of 3 mm, the laser drives a plasma bubble that traps and accelerates plasma electrons. The resulting electron beam is extremely collimated and quasi-monoenergetic, with a high charge of 0.5 nC at 170 MeV.


Nature | 2006

Controlled injection and acceleration of electrons in plasma wakefields by colliding laser pulses.

Jérôme Faure; Clément Rechatin; A. Norlin; A. Lifschitz; Y. Glinec; Victor Malka

In laser-plasma-based accelerators, an intense laser pulse drives a large electric field (the wakefield) which accelerates particles to high energies in distances much shorter than in conventional accelerators. These high acceleration gradients, of a few hundreds of gigavolts per metre, hold the promise of compact high-energy particle accelerators. Recently, several experiments have shown that laser-plasma accelerators can produce high-quality electron beams, with quasi-monoenergetic energy distributions at the 100 MeV level. However, these beams do not have the stability and reproducibility that are required for applications. This is because the mechanism responsible for injecting electrons into the wakefield is based on highly nonlinear phenomena, and is therefore hard to control. Here we demonstrate that the injection and subsequent acceleration of electrons can be controlled by using a second laser pulse. The collision of the two laser pulses provides a pre-acceleration stage which provokes the injection of electrons into the wakefield. The experimental results show that the electron beams obtained in this manner are collimated (5 mrad divergence), monoenergetic (with energy spread <10 per cent), tuneable (between 15 and 250 MeV) and, most importantly, stable. In addition, the experimental observations are compatible with electron bunch durations shorter than 10 fs. We anticipate that this stable and compact electron source will have a strong impact on applications requiring short bunches, such as the femtolysis of water, or high stability, such as radiotherapy with high-energy electrons or radiography for materials science.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2006

Absolute calibration for a broad range single shot electron spectrometer

Y. Glinec; Jérôme Faure; A. Guemnie-Tafo; Victor Malka; H. Monard; Jean-Philippe Larbre; V. De Waele; Jean-Louis Marignier; Mehran Mostafavi

This article gives a detailed description of a single shot electron spectrometer which was used to characterize electron beams produced by laser-plasma interaction. Contrary to conventional electron sources, electron beams from laser-plasma accelerators can produce a broad range of energies. Therefore, diagnosing these electron spectra requires specific attention and experimental development. Here, we provide an absolute calibration of the Lanex Kodak Fine screen on a laser-triggered radio frequency picosecond electron accelerator. The efficiency of scintillating screens irradiated by electron beams has never been investigated so far. This absolute calibration is then compared to charge measurements from an integrating current transformer for quasimonoenergetic electron spectra from laser-plasma interaction.


Physics of Plasmas | 2005

Monoenergetic electron beam optimization in the bubble regime

Victor Malka; Jérôme Faure; Y. Glinec; A. Pukhov; Jean-Philippe Rousseau

Within the last decade, laser-plasma based accelerators have been able to deliver electron beams with Maxwellian energy distributions characterized by effective temperatures in the range of 1–20MeV. Changing the interaction parameters, the electron beam quality was improved. Especially, matching the interaction length to the dephasing length was crucial to produce an extremely high quality electron beam with a quasimonoenergetic distribution at 170MeV. The optimization of these distributions is presented, as well as comparisons with three-dimensional particle-in-cell code simulations.


Medical Physics | 2005

Radiotherapy with laser‐plasma accelerators: Monte Carlo simulation of dose deposited by an experimental quasimonoenergetic electron beam

Y. Glinec; Jérôme Faure; Victor Malka; Thomas Fuchs; Hanitra Szymanowski; Uwe Oelfke

The most recent experimental results obtained with laser-plasma accelerators are applied to radio-therapy simulations. The narrow electron beam, produced during the interaction of the laser with the gas jet, has a high charge (0.5 nC) and is quasimonoenergetic (170 +/- 20 MeV). The dose deposition is calculated in a water phantom placed at different distances from the diverging electron source. We show that, using magnetic fields to refocus the electron beam inside the water phantom, the transverse penumbra is improved. This electron beam is well suited for delivering a high dose peaked on the propagation axis, a sharp and narrow tranverse penumbra combined with a deep penetration.


Laser and Particle Beams | 2005

Generation of quasi-monoenergetic electron beams using ultrashort and ultraintense laser pulses

Y. Glinec; Jérôme Faure; A. Pukhov; S. Kiselev; S. Gordienko; Brigitte Mercier; Victor Malka

Plasma-based accelerators have been proposed for the next generation of compact accelerators because of the huge electric fields they can support. However, it has been difficult to use them efficiently for applications because they produce poor quality particle beams with large energy spreads. Here, we demonstrate a dramatic enhancement in the quality of electron beams produced in laser-plasma interaction: an ultrashort laser pulse drives a plasma bubble which traps and accelerates plasma electrons to a single energy. This produces an extremely collimated and quasi-monoenergetic electron beam with a high charge of 0.5 nanocoulomb at energy 170 ± 20 MeV.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2009

Treatment planning for laser-accelerated very-high energy electrons

Thomas Fuchs; Hanitra Szymanowski; Uwe Oelfke; Y. Glinec; Clément Rechatin; Jérôme Faure; Victor Malka

In recent experiments, quasi-monoenergetic and well-collimated very-high energy electron (VHEE) beams were obtained by laser-plasma accelerators. We investigate their potential use for radiation therapy. Monte Carlo simulations are used to study the influence of the experimental characteristics such as beam energy, energy spread and initial angular distribution on the dose distributions. It is found that magnetic focusing of the electron beam improves the lateral penumbra. The dosimetric properties of the laser-accelerated VHEE beams are implemented in our inverse treatment planning system for intensity-modulated treatments. The influence of the beam characteristics on the quality of a prostate treatment plan is evaluated. In comparison to a clinically approved 6 MV IMRT photon plan, a better target coverage is achieved. The quality of the sparing of organs at risk is found to be dependent on the depth. The bladder and rectum are better protected due to the sharp lateral penumbra at low depths, whereas the femoral heads receive a larger dose because of the large scattering amplitude at larger depths.


EPL | 2008

Direct observation of betatron oscillations in a laser-plasma electron accelerator

Y. Glinec; Jérôme Faure; A. Lifschitz; Jorge Vieira; Ricardo Fonseca; L. O. Silva; Victor Malka

During experiments performed on a laser-plasma–based accelerator, correlation of the electron output angle with the electron energy has been observed. These spectral oscillations of the electron beam centroid are attributed to betatron oscillations of the electron beam during its propagation. An analytical model for betatron oscillations including constant longitudinal acceleration is described and used to validate the scenario and retrieve physical parameters. The oscillations can arise from an off-axis injection of the electrons, which can be reproduced using an asymmetric laser intensity profile in Particle-In-Cell (PIC) simulations. This study emphasizes the influence of non-ideal interaction conditions inherent to experiments.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2005

Laser-plasma accelerators : a new tool for science and for society

Victor Malka; Jérôme Faure; Y. Glinec; A. Lifschitz

The recent and continuous development of powerful laser systems has permitted the emergence of new approaches for generating energetic electron beams. By focusing light pulses containing a few joules of energy in a few tens of femtoseconds onto gas jets, extremely large electric fields can be generated, reaching the terravolts per metre level. Such fields are 10?000 times greater than those produced in the radio-frequency cavities of conventional accelerators. As a result, the length over which electrons extracted from the target can be accelerated to hundreds of MeV is reduced to a few millimetres. The reduction of the size and the cost of laser-plasma accelerators is a promising consequence, but these electron beams also reveal original properties, which make them a wonderful tool for science. By adjusting the interaction parameters, the electron energy distribution can be tuned from a maxwellian-like distribution to a quasi-monoenergetic one. The new properties of these laser-based particle beams are well suited to many applications in different fields, including medicine (radiotherapy), chemistry (ultrafast radiolysis), material science (non-destructive material inspection using radiography) and, of course, for accelerator physics.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008

High flux of relativistic electrons produced in femtosecond laser-thin foil target interactions: Characterization with nuclear techniques

M. Gerbaux; F. Gobet; M. M. Aléonard; F. Hannachi; G. Malka; J. N. Scheurer; M. Tarisien; G. Claverie; V. Méot; P. Morel; Jérôme Faure; Y. Glinec; A. Guemnie-Tafo; Victor Malka; M. Manclossi; J. J. Santos

We present a protocol to characterize the high energy electron beam emitted in the interaction of an ultraintense laser with matter at intensities higher than 10(19) W cm(-2). The electron energies and angular distributions are determined as well as the total number of electrons produced above a 10 MeV threshold. This protocol is based on measurements with an electron spectrometer and nuclear activation techniques, combined with Monte Carlo simulations based on the GEANT3 code. The method is detailed and exemplified with data obtained with polypropylene and copper thin solid targets at a laser intensity of 2x10(19) W cm(-2). Special care is taken of the different sources of uncertainties. In particular, the reproducibility of the laser shots is considered.

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Victor Malka

Université Paris-Saclay

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Jérôme Faure

University of California

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A. Pukhov

University of Düsseldorf

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Uwe Oelfke

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

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Hanitra Szymanowski

German Cancer Research Center

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