29 June 2026 to 3 July 2026
EICC, Edinburgh
Europe/London timezone

Optimising non-linear Breit-Wheeler pair production in simulated laser experiments

Not scheduled
20m
EICC, Edinburgh

EICC, Edinburgh

150 Morrison St, Edinburgh EH3 8EE
Oral Presentation Ultra-high Intensity Laser-matter Interaction and High-field Physics (BPIF)

Description

High laser intensities enable the production of electron-positron pairs from bright gamma rays passing through strong fields. Potentially the most promising approach for all-optical experiments in the near term uses dense but higher divergence electron beams from laser wakefield acceleration to produce gamma rays through inverse Compton scattering. Achieving many-photon collisions between these gamma rays and the high intensity laser pulse in practice is extremely difficult, however, due to significant shot-to-shot jitter in laser pointing and timing. In practice, this jitter reduces the yield of electron-positron pairs by orders of magnitude.

We model these practical difficulties using simulated Monte-Carlo experiments. By using a more efficient algorithm for sampling infrequent pair production with particle splitting, we enable the exploration of a multi-dimensional parameter space. Using Gaussian Process Regression we then efficiently find optimal conditions for maximising pair production by changing the laser spot size, the energy in the colliding beam, and the stand-off distance between the laser wakefield accelerator and the focus of the colliding laser pulse. We find that the optimal stand-off distance increases with the degree of laser jitter and that the best conditions for producing electron-positron pairs are not the same as the best conditions for maximising the energy in the gamma rays. With 100 J of laser energy, we estimate realistic rates of pair production of around 1 pair per 100 electrons are achievable even with jitter of 10s of microns and 10s of femtoseconds.

Author

Christopher Arran (Lancaster University)

Co-authors

Christopher Paul Ridgers (University of York) Dr Stuart Morris (AWE)

Presentation materials

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