Rh. Pantell, PARTICLE-ACCELERATION WITH LASERS, Nuclear instruments & methods in physics research. Section A, Accelerators, spectrometers, detectors and associated equipment, 393(1-3), 1997, pp. 1-5
Lasers have been considered for charged particle acceleration because
of their high peak power and because intense field strengths can be ob
tained far from material surfaces. Several different mechanisms for tr
ansferring energy from a light beam to an electron beam are discussed.
A novel accelerator structure, consisting of an open wave guide, is d
escribed. Desirable features of this design are that the interaction i
s in vacuum, particle motion is linear, acceleration gradient is high,
there is high-energy transfer per stage, and the structure is simple
with dimensions that are orders of magnitude larger than the laser wav
elength. An energy increment of 1.6 GeV can be obtained in a distance
of 1.6 m with a 25 TW laser.