Characterisation of supersonic gas jets for different nozzle geometries for laser-plasma acceleration experiments at SPARC_LAB

G. Costa*, M. P. Anania, A. Biagioni, F. G. Bisesto, M. Del Franco, M. Galletti, M. Ferrario, R. Pompili, S. Romeo, A. R. Rossi, A. Zigler, A. Cianchi

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Plasma-based technology promises a tremendous reduction in size of accelerators used for research, medical, and industrial applications, making it possible to develop tabletop machines accessible for a broader scientific community. The use of high-power laser pulses on gaseous targets is a promising method for the generation of accelerated electron beams at energies on the GeV scale, in extremely small sizes, typically millimetres. The gaseous target in question can be a collimated supersonic gasjet from a nozzle. In this work, a technique for optimising the so generated plasma channel is presented. In detail, a study on the influence of the nozzle throat shape in relation to the uniformity and density of the generated plasma profile is reported. These considerations are discussed first of all from a theoretical point of view, by means of a stationary one-dimensional mathematical model of the neutral gas, thus exploiting the possibility of comparing the properties of the output flow for different nozzle geometries. This is combined with an experimental approach using interferometric longitudinal density measurements of the plasma channel. The latter is generated by a high-power laser pulse focused on a helium gasjet, in the SPARC_LAB laboratories.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberC01049
JournalJournal of Instrumentation
Volume17
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 IOP Publishing Ltd and Sissa Medialab.

Keywords

  • Plasma diagnostics-interferometry, spectroscopy and imaging
  • Plasma diagnostics-probes
  • Plasma generation (laser-produced, RF, X ray-produced)

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