Prospects for performing tests of quantum electrodynamics with high-intensity lasers
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Date
2023
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Abstract
Charged particles emit radiation in the presence of strong electromagnetic
fields. Emission implies a recoil on the charge, altering its dynamics and is
referred to as radiation reaction (RR). Current experiments are on the verge
of probing the quantum regime of RR by usage of intense laser pulses colliding with high-energy electron beams. The framework for quantum RR is
described by quantum electrodynamics (QED) and becomes nonperturbative in the strong-field limit (SFQED). Theoretical knowledge beyond it is
limited but could potentially be detectable with upcoming laser facilities.
Here, the presence of electron-positron cascades and low-energy emissions
masks any signal emergent in such experiments. Hence, the appeal for strategies to extract signals of SFQED and/or the adoption of advanced statistical
techniques. In this thesis, we develop strategies to retrieve information in
laser-electron experiments. Firstly, we establish a selection rule based on the
kinematic properties of electrons and their emissions to form a descriptive
reading at the detector. Secondly, we explore the role of tight focusing of
lasers to attain extreme regimes of interest of which we derive the optimal
solution we call the bidipole wave. Finally, we propose an experimental
framework capable of inferring parameters of models designated to capture
SFQED effects using Bayesian techniques.
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Keywords
laser, plasma, accelerator, radiator reaction, experiment, QED, Bayesian interference