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The blue streak in this photograph shows the dramatic gain in
energy made by some of the electrons in a bunch after passing
through plasma (ionized gas). The white spot shows the electrons
in the bunch that generated the plasma to propel the other electrons
to double their energy, to 85 billion electron volts (GeV). The
electrons can be photographed because they emit blue light as
they pass through air. Credit: SLAC
New Accelerator Technique
Doubles Particle Energy in Just One Meter
Imagine a car that accelerates from zero to sixty in 250 feet,
and then rockets to 120 miles per hour in just one more inch.
That’s essentially what a collaboration of accelerator physicists
has accomplished, using electrons for their racecars and plasma
for the afterburners. Because electrons already travel at near
light’s speed in an accelerator, the physicists actually
doubled the energy of the electrons, not their speed.
The researchers—from the Department of Energy’s Stanford
Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), the UCLA Henry Samueli School
of Engineering and Applied Science, and the University of Southern
California Viterbi School of Engineering—published their
work in the February 15 issue of Nature.
The achievement demonstrates a technology that may drive the future
of accelerator design. To reach the high energies required to
answer the new set of mysteries confronting particle physics—such
as dark energy and the origin of mass—the newest accelerators
are immensely bigger, and consequently more expensive, than their
predecessors. Very high-energy particle beams will be needed to
detect the very heavy and very short-lived particles that have
eluded scientists so far.
“We hope that someday these breakthroughs will make future
generations of accelerators feasible and affordable,” said
SLAC Deputy Director Persis Drell. “It’s wonderful
to see the tremendous progress in understanding the underlying
physics for fundamentally new methods of accelerating particles.”
While still in early development stages, the research shows that
acceleration using plasma, or ionized gas, can dramatically boost
the energy of particles in a short distance.
“The scale is pretty remarkable,” said SLAC physicist
Mark Hogan. “You need an airplane to take a picture of the
two-mile linear accelerator here. Yet in a space shorter than
the span of your arms, we doubled the electrons’ energy
to the highest ever made here. I hope in the long term it leads
to extending the capabilities of existing and upcoming machines
at modest costs.”
The electrons first traveled two miles through the linear accelerator
at SLAC, gaining 42 billion electron volts (or GeV) of energy.
Then they passed through a 33-inch long (84-centimeter) plasma
chamber and picked up another 42 GeV of energy. Like an afterburner
on a jet engine, the plasma provides extra thrust. The plasma
chamber is filled with lithium gas. As the electron bunch passes
through the lithium, the front of the bunch creates plasma. This
plasma leaves a wake that flows to the back of the bunch and shoves
it forward, giving electrons in the back more energy.
The experiment created one of the biggest acceleration gradients
ever achieved. The gradient is a measure of how quickly particles
amass energy. In this case, the electrons hurtling through the
plasma chamber gained 3,000 times more energy per meter than usual
in the accelerator.
The recent advance is the culmination of almost a decade work,
led by SLAC Professor Robert Siemann, UCLA Electrical Engineering
Professor Chan Joshi, and USC Engineering Professor Thomas Katsouleas.
“Physicists use particle accelerators to answer some of
the most profound questions about the nature of the universe,”
said Joshi. “I am hopeful that plasma acceleration will
enable us to continue the rich tradition of discovery.”
"We are all heartened that we are continuing to climb the
plasma acceleration learning curve," said USC Engineering
Professor Patric Muggli.
A current experimental limitation is that most of the electrons
in a bunch lose their energy to the plasma.
“We take energy out of one part of the beam and put it into
another part,” Hogan said.
During the last two years, the team has improved the plasma acceleration
gradient by a factor of 200. One of the next steps is to attempt
a two-bunch system, where the first bunch provides all the energy
to the trailing bunch. In a full-scale plasma accelerator, physicists
would use those second bunches to create high-energy particle
collisions in their detectors.
The research was funded by the Department of Energy and the National
Science Foundation.
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For more information on Professor
Chan Joshi, click
here.
To view the press release, click
here.
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