Collaborative Research: Graduate Student Training Through Research on Plasma-Based Accelerators
合作研究:通过等离子体加速器研究培养研究生
基本信息
- 批准号:0935197
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 62.4万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:Standard Grant
- 财政年份:2009
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2009-09-15 至 2013-09-30
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
This award is funded under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Public Law 111-5). This is a collaborative project involving a consortium of six premier U.S universities and one national laboratory to train graduate students in an area of anticipated manpower need: advanced acceleration techniques. In particular, students will be trained in experiment, theory and computer simulations on plasma-based particle accelerators. Recent results in this field have shown that plasma-based particle accelerators have the potential to drastically reduce the size and hopefully the cost of future colliders needed for basic science on the one hand and to lead to table-top electron accelerators for myriad industrial, medical and research applications on the other. This project seeks to provide a coordinated learning and research experience for Ph.D. students from leading research institutions that have developed different sets of experimental and theoretical/simulations tools. The topics proposed for their theses span fundamental science yet to be uncovered in the plasma-based accelerators field, the development of new diagnostic techniques, advancing the underlying theory, and advancing the use of computational techniques to model both fundamental phenomenology and ongoing experiments. Examples of basic science topics that will be experimentally investigated include ionization induced trapping, generation of He2+ ion beams, acceleration of electrons and generation of radiation in spatially modulated plasma waveguides, control of plasma wakefields using a beat-wave or two-color scheme and the development of a high repetition rate wakefield accelerator. While most of the experiments will be done using high power lasers, the 75 MeV electron beam facility (ATF) at Brookhaven will be used to investigate high-gradient, high-efficiency acceleration of electrons in a beam driven wakefield. Much effort will be devoted to the development of diagnostic techniques. For instance a Faraday rotation technique will be explored as a means to identify the self-trapping of particles in the wake whereas a tomographic imaging technique will be developed to enable visualization of the evolving wakes. Theoretical/computational effort will focus on many fronts including emittance preservation in wakefields, self-propagation of laser pulses over pump depletion distances, novel strategies for acceleration of positrons, and physics of electron trapping and injection in plasma accelerators. Plasma-based accelerator laboratories arguably contain the most complex and cross-disciplinary instrumentation as any on a campus. In addition, the field of plasma-based acceleration is also very cross disciplinary. Computer simulations in this area are at the forefront of computational science and high performance computing. Furthermore, the field is also at the forefront of closely coupling experimental data to simulation data. The challenges of using complex experimental and computational instruments to carry out cross disciplinary research attracts creative physics and engineering students as well as provides them with an excellent training environment. Plasma-based acceleration has the potential for broad impact. It may some day be the technology used to build a future linear collider at the energy frontier as well as be the basis for compact accelerators that would have use in medicine and novel photon sources. The intent of this project is to provide the graduate students with a sense of community through the formation of a multi-university consortium that has access to state-of-the-art facilities and a multi-disciplinary intellectual environment. This will be accomplished through sharing of intellectual as well as of experimental resources. The students will be in direct contact with a large number of leading researchers in the field. The project will produce a trained workforce that is comfortable with complex systems, interdisciplinary research and collaboration, reporting of findings to colleagues, and ready for future challenges, such as a future plasma-based high-energy particle collider at the energy frontier.
该奖项是根据2009年美国复苏和再投资法案(公法111-5)资助的。这是一个合作项目,涉及六所美国一流大学和一个国家实验室的联盟,以培养研究生在一个预期的人力需求领域:先进的加速技术。特别是,学生将接受基于等离子体的粒子加速器的实验,理论和计算机模拟方面的培训。这一领域的最新研究结果表明,基于等离子体的粒子加速器一方面有可能大幅降低基础科学所需的未来对撞机的尺寸和成本,另一方面也有可能导致桌面电子加速器用于无数的工业,医疗和研究应用。该项目旨在为博士提供协调的学习和研究经验。来自领先研究机构的学生,他们开发了不同的实验和理论/模拟工具。为他们的论文提出的主题涵盖了基于等离子体的加速器领域尚未发现的基础科学,新诊断技术的发展,推进基础理论,以及推进使用计算技术来模拟基础现象学和正在进行的实验。将进行实验研究的基础科学课题的例子包括电离诱导捕获,氦离子束的产生,电子的加速和空间调制等离子体波导中的辐射的产生,使用拍波或双色方案的等离子体尾场的控制和高重复率韦克菲尔德加速器的发展。虽然大多数实验将使用高功率激光器进行,但布鲁克海文的75 MeV电子束设施(ATF)将用于研究束驱动韦克菲尔德中电子的高梯度、高效率加速。 将作出很大努力来发展诊断技术。例如,将探索法拉第旋转技术作为识别尾流中粒子自陷的手段,而将开发断层成像技术以使演变的尾流可视化。理论/计算工作将集中在许多方面,包括尾场中的发射度保持、激光脉冲在泵耗尽距离上的自传播、正电子加速的新策略以及等离子体加速器中电子捕获和注入的物理学。基于等离子体的加速器实验室可以说包含了校园中最复杂和最跨学科的仪器。此外,基于等离子体的加速领域也是非常交叉的学科。在这个领域的计算机模拟是在计算科学和高性能计算的前沿。此外,该领域也处于将实验数据与模拟数据紧密耦合的最前沿。使用复杂的实验和计算仪器进行跨学科研究的挑战吸引了创造性的物理和工程专业的学生,并为他们提供了良好的培训环境。基于等离子体的加速具有广泛影响的潜力。也许有一天,它会成为建造未来能源前沿直线对撞机的技术,也会成为紧凑型加速器的基础,用于医学和新型光子源。该项目的目的是通过建立一个多大学联盟,为研究生提供一种社区感,该联盟拥有最先进的设施和多学科的知识环境。这将通过分享知识和实验资源来实现。学生将与该领域的大量领先研究人员直接接触。 该项目将培养一支训练有素的员工队伍,他们熟悉复杂的系统,跨学科的研究和合作,向同事报告研究结果,并为未来的挑战做好准备,例如在能源前沿的未来等离子体高能粒子对撞机。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Wim Leemans其他文献
Bringing Instant Neural Graphics Primitives to Immersive Virtual Reality
将即时神经图形基元引入沉浸式虚拟现实
- DOI:
10.1109/vrw58643.2023.00212 - 发表时间:
2023 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
Ke Li;Tim Rolff;S. Schmidt;R. Bacher;Simone Frintrop;Wim Leemans;Frank Steinicke - 通讯作者:
Frank Steinicke
Interactive Data Fusion of Neural Radiance Fields for Industrial Facility Inspection in Virtual Reality
用于虚拟现实工业设施检查的神经辐射场的交互式数据融合
- DOI:
10.1109/vrw62533.2024.00204 - 发表时间:
2024 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
Ke Li;S. Schmidt;Tim Rolff;Reinhard Bacher;Wim Leemans;Frank Steinicke - 通讯作者:
Frank Steinicke
Wim Leemans的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Wim Leemans', 18)}}的其他基金
From Phase Space Manipulation to First Light from a Laser Plasma Accelerator Powered Free Electron Laser
从相空间操纵到激光等离子体加速器驱动的自由电子激光器的第一束光
- 批准号:
1632796 - 财政年份:2016
- 资助金额:
$ 62.4万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Beam Manipulation of Laser-Plasma Accelerated Beams for Advanced Accelerator and Radiation Source Applications
用于先进加速器和辐射源应用的激光等离子体加速光束的光束操纵
- 批准号:
1415596 - 财政年份:2014
- 资助金额:
$ 62.4万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Ultrafast coherent XUV radiation from a laser-plasma-accelerated electron beam
来自激光等离子体加速电子束的超快相干 XUV 辐射
- 批准号:
0917687 - 财政年份:2009
- 资助金额:
$ 62.4万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Multi-keV x-ray production by high harmonic generation using ultra-intense lasers
使用超强激光器通过高次谐波产生多 keV X 射线
- 批准号:
0614001 - 财政年份:2006
- 资助金额:
$ 62.4万 - 项目类别:
Continuing Grant
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