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Abstract
Capillary channels of ≈3cm in length and with plasma densities ≈1018cm−3 are a promising alternative to the much shorter, higher-density gas jets for GeV-scale laser wakefield acceleration of electrons. However, the large discrepancy between length scales of the plasma and the laser presents a major computational challenge for particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations. Methods are therefore sought that relax the need to concurrently resolve both length scales. For example, the commonly used “moving window” algorithm enables a reduction of the computational domain to a few plasma wavelengths, which is orders of magnitude smaller than the full length of the laser-plasma interaction. In addition, ponderomotive guiding center methods enable relaxation of the constraint to resolve the laser wavelength. These averaging methods split the laser-induced current into a rapidly varying part and a slowly varying envelope. The average over fast time scales is performed in a semianalytic way, leaving the evolution of the laser envelope and the plasma response to be modeled numerically. Here, we present a ponderomotive guiding center algorithm and demonstrate its applicability to model capillary channels by comparing it with fully kinetic PIC simulations.
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