Title of article :
High quality proton beams from hybrid integrated laser-driven ion acceleration systems
Author/Authors :
Sinigardi، نويسنده , , Stefano and Turchetti، نويسنده , , L.Giorgio and Rossi، نويسنده , , Francesco and Londrillo، نويسنده , , Pasquale and Giove، نويسنده , , Dario and De Martinis، نويسنده , , Carlo and Bolton، نويسنده , , Paul R.، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
We consider a hybrid acceleration scheme for protons where the laser generated beam is selected in energy and angle and injected into a compact linac, which raises the energy from 30 to 60 MeV. The laser acceleration regime is TNSA and the energy spectrum is determined by the cutoff energy and proton temperature. The dependence of the spectrum on the target properties and the incidence angle is investigated with 2D PIC simulations. We base our work on widely available technologies and on laser with a short pulse, having in mind a facility whose cost is approximately 15 M € . Using a recent experiment as the reference, we choose the laser pulse and target so that the energy spectrum obtained from the 3D PIC simulation is close to the one observed, whose cutoff energy was estimated to be over 50 MeV. Laser accelerated protons in the TNSA regime have wide energy spectrum and broad divergence. In this paper we compare three transport lines, designed to perform energy selection and beam collimation. They are based on a solenoid, a quadruplet of permanent magnetic quadrupoles and a chicane. To increase the maximum available energy, which is actually seen as an upper limit due to laser properties and available targets, we propose to inject protons into a small linac for post-acceleration. The number of selected and injected protons is the highest with the solenoid and lower by one and two orders of magnitude with the quadrupoles and the chicane respectively. Even though only the solenoid enables achieving to reach a final intensity at the threshold required for therapy with the highest beam quality, the other systems will be very likely used in the first experiments. Realistic start-to-end simulations, as the ones reported here, are relevant for the design of such experiments.
Keywords :
Laser-acceleration , Beam transport , 3D PIC , Post-acceleration
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics