Abstract

The laser wakefield acceleration of monoenergetic multi-GeV electron beams in the bubble regime is investigated via particle-in-cell simulations considering laser guiding of sub-petawatt pulses by an optimized plasma waveguide. The density profile of the plasma has a transverse transition from a low value for the laser guiding central channel to an optimal higher value for the surrounding plasma. Multidimensional particle-in-cell simulations in the nonlinear bubble regime show that when the spot size of the Gaussian laser pulse is matched to the diameter of the low-density laser-guiding plasma channel, electron self-injection can be transversely provided from the surrounding high-density plasma mitigating the need for a minimum electron density of the low-density channel to trigger the self-injection. Accordingly, the pump depletion and electron dephasing lengths can be increased by reducing the electron density of the axial channel, and the electron bunch can be accelerated to considerably longer distances. As a result, the energy gain of the trapped electrons, injected from the surrounding high-density region, can be efficiently enhanced. Under such conditions, a completely localized electron bunch with considerably decreased energy spread (<2%) and enhanced peak energy (∼2.5GeV) is accelerated over a length of ∼6mm by a sub-petawatt laser pulse (∼86TW).

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