A step towards mini accelerators for widespread use

UK scientists and engineers, working at CERN, have helped achieve a world first which could enable widespread use of particle accelerators in labs and hospitals around the world.

In a paper published in journal Nature the โ€˜AWAKEโ€™ collaboration reports the successful acceleration of electrons using a wave generated by protons zipping through plasma. The acceleration is 40 times higher than that so far recorded using conventional accelerator technologies in CERNโ€™s Large Hadron Collider, meaning that the use of plasma waves or so-called wakefields may offer a new way to build small-size, affordable, high-energy particle accelerators.

AWAKE-UK Scientific Project Manager, Professor Carsten Welsch, commented: "This breakthrough result shows, for the first time, that proton-driven electron beam acceleration offers a promising pathway towards the highest energy beams provided by a very compact accelerator. This has the potential to enable entirely new particle physics experiments.โ€

In May this year the AWAKE collaboration successfully accelerated electrons in plasma for the first time. Electrons injected into AWAKE at relatively low energies of around 19 MeV โ€˜rodeโ€™ the plasma wave and were accelerated by a factor of around 100; to an energy of almost 2 GeV over a length of 10 metres.

Current state-of-the-art particle accelerator technologies, considered for the next generation of electron accelerators, promise gradients in the range of just 30โ€“100 million volts per metre. These represent todayโ€™s most advanced technology for the overall distance over which acceleration can be sustained, on the one hand, and the intensity and quality of accelerated beams, on the other โ€“ two important factors required for high-energy physics experiments. However, they have reached their limit. The next steps of AWAKE, which aims to achieve gradients of 1,000 MV/m, include addressing these additional requirements.

While previous experiments have relied on using electrons or lasers to drive the wake, AWAKE is the first to use protons. โ€œDrive beams of protons penetrate deeper into the plasma than drive beams of electrons and lasers,โ€ said Allen Caldwell, Spokesperson of the AWAKE collaboration. โ€œTherefore, wakefield accelerators relying on protons for their drive beams can accelerate electrons for a greater distance, consequently allowing them to attain higher energies.โ€

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