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Plasma based acceleration (PBA) is being considered for a next generation linear collider (LC). In typical AsmPBA-LC designs, the extreme beam parameters are expected to trigger background ion motion, which can lead to longitudinally varying nonlinear focusing forces and result in emittance growth of the beam. While various schemes have been proposed to mitigate this at low beam energies, a solution to minimize the emittance growth in the later high energy stages of a multistage electron acceleration arm is yet to be found. In this paper, we propose to use an adiabatic plasma density ramp as a matching section that is able to match the witness electron beam to the low-density plasma entrance, where the beam initially has a large matched spot size so the ion motion effects are relatively small. As the beam propagates in the plasma density upramp (downramp), it is adiabatically focused (defocused) and its distribution maintains an equilibrium distribution throughout the entire process even when severe ion collapse has occurred. Simulation results from QPAD show that within a single acceleration stage, this concept can limit the projected emittance growth to only ∼2% for a 25 GeV, 100 nm normalized emittance witness beam and ∼20% for a 100 GeV, 100 nm normalized emittance witness beam.more » « less
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The quality of electron beams produced from plasma-based accelerators, i.e., normalized brightness and energy spread, has made transformative progress in the past several decades in both simulation and experiment. Recently, full-scale particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations have shown that electron beams with unprecedented brightness (1020–1021 A=m2=rad2) and 0.1–1 MeVenergy spread can be produced through controlled injection in a slowly expanding bubble that arises when a particle beam or laser pulse propagates in density gradient, or when a particle beam self-focuses in uniform plasma or has a superluminal flying focus. However, in previous simulations of work on self-injection triggered by an evolving laser driver in a uniform plasma, the resulting beams did not exhibit comparable brightnesses and energy spreads. Here, we demonstrate through the use of large-scale high-fidelity PIC simulations that a slowly expanding bubble driven by a laser pulse in a uniform plasma can indeed produce self-injected electron beams with similar brightness and energy spreads as for an evolving bubble driven by an electron beam driver. We consider laser spot sizes roughly equal to the matched spot sizes in a uniform plasma and find that the evolution of the bubble occurs naturally through the evolution of the laser. The effects of the electron beam quality on the choice of physical as well as numerical parameters, e.g., grid sizes and field solvers used in the PIC simulations are presented. It is found that this original and simplest injection scheme can produce electron beams with beam quality exceeding that of the more recent concepts.more » « less
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