Collimated γ-ray emission enabled by efficient direct laser acceleration

K. Tangtartharakul*, G. Fauvel, T. Meir, F. P. Condamine, S. Weber, I. Pomerantz, M. Manuel, A. Arefiev

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

We investigate the mechanisms responsible for single-lobed versus double-lobed angular distributions of emitted γ-rays in laser-irradiated plasmas, focusing on how direct laser acceleration (DLA) shapes the emission profile. Using test-particle calculations, we show that the efficiency of DLA plays a central role. In the inefficient DLA regime, electrons rapidly gain and lose energy within a single laser cycle, resulting in a double-lobed emission profile heavily influenced by laser fields. In contrast, in the efficient DLA regime, electrons steadily accumulate energy over multiple laser cycles, achieving much higher energies and emitting orders of magnitude more energy. This emission is intensely collimated and results in single-lobed profiles dominated by quasi-static azimuthal magnetic fields in the plasma. Particle-in-cell simulations demonstrate that lower-density targets create favorable conditions for some electrons to enter the efficient DLA regime. These electrons can dominate the emission, transforming the overall profile from double-lobed to single-lobed, even though inefficient DLA electrons remain present. These findings provide valuable insights for optimizing laser-driven γ-ray sources for applications requiring high-intensity, well-collimated beams.

Original languageEnglish
Article number023024
JournalNew Journal of Physics
Volume27
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Feb 2025

Funding

FundersFunder number
United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation
National Science Foundation-Czech Science Foundation
Grantová Agentura České Republiky22-42890 L
Texas Advanced Computing CenterStampede3
National Science Foundation2138286, PHY-2206777, 2138296, 2138307, 2137603, 2138259
Bloom's Syndrome FoundationPHY190034, 2022322

    Keywords

    • collimated gamma-ray emission
    • direct laser acceleration
    • high-intensity laser-plasma interactions
    • laser-driven gamma-ray source
    • particle-in-cell simulation

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