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"Electron accelerators"
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Industrial accelerators and their applications
by
Hamm, Robert W
,
Hamm, Marianne E
in
Accelerator Physics
,
Applied Physics
,
Electron accelerators
2012
This unique new book is a comprehensive review of the many current industrial applications of particle accelerators, written by experts in each of these fields. Readers will gain a broad understanding of the principles of these applications, the extent to which they are employed, and the accelerator technology utilized. The book also serves as a thorough introduction to these fields for non-experts and laymen.
Modification of Beam Transport Line Design for Simultaneous Top-up Injection to PF and PF-AR
by
Enomoto,Yoshinori
,
Higashi,Nao
,
Honda,Tohru
in
Accelerator Physics
,
mc2-a05-synchrotron-radiation-facilities - MC2.A05: Synchrotron Radiation Facilities
,
mc2-photon-sources-and-electron-accelerators - MC2: Photon Sources and Electron Accelerators
2024
Journal Article
Wide-Aperture, Low-Energy Electron Accelerators Based on High-Voltage Glow Discharge
by
Kosogorov, S. L.
,
Uspenskii, N. A.
,
Shvedyuk, V. Ya
in
Accelerators
,
Apertures
,
Condensed Matter Physics
2021
The paper describes the operation and design specifics of wide-aperture accelerators based on non-self-maintained high-voltage glow discharge. Shown are the advantages of these accelerators over the conventional accelerators based on a number of longitudinal thermal emitters. The paper presents the main characteristics and parameters of accelerators developed at the Efremov Institute of Electrophysical Apparatus, Saint-Petersburg, Russia, and applied in different fields of science and technology.
Journal Article
Racetrack Microtron—Pushing the Limits
by
Shvedunov, Vasiliy
,
Ermakov, Andrey
,
Borisov, Maxim
in
Current loss
,
Electron accelerators
,
Energy
2021
We consider three types of electron accelerators that can be used for various applications, such as industrial, medical, cargo inspection, and isotope production applications, and that require small- and medium-sized machines, namely classical microtron (CM), race-track microtron (RTM), and multisection linac. We review the principles of their operation, the specific features of the beam dynamics in these machines, discuss their advantages and weak points, and compare their technical characteristics. In particular, we emphasize the intrinsic symmetry of the stability region of microtrons. We argue that RTMs can be a preferable choice for medium energies (up to 100 MeV) and that the range of their potential applications can be widened, provided that the beam current losses are significantly reduced. In the article, we analyze two possible solutions in detail, namely increasing the longitudinal acceptance of an RTM using a higher-order harmonic accelerating structure and improving beam matching at the injection.
Journal Article
Segmented terahertz electron accelerator and manipulator (STEAM)
by
Zapata, Luis E
,
Matlis, Nicholas H
,
Hemmer, Michael
in
Acceleration
,
Accelerators
,
Compression
2018
Acceleration and manipulation of electron bunches underlie most electron and X-ray devices used for ultrafast imaging and spectroscopy. New terahertz-driven concepts offer orders-of-magnitude improvements in field strengths, field gradients, laser synchronization and compactness relative to conventional radiofrequency devices, enabling shorter electron bunches and higher resolution with less infrastructure while maintaining high charge capacities (pC), repetition rates (kHz) and stability. We present a segmented terahertz electron accelerator and manipulator (STEAM) capable of performing multiple high-field operations on the six-dimensional phase space of ultrashort electron bunches. With this single device, powered by few-microjoule, single-cycle, 0.3 THz pulses, we demonstrate record terahertz acceleration of >30 keV, streaking with <10 fs resolution, focusing with >2 kT m–1 strength, compression to ~100 fs as well as real-time switching between these modes of operation. The STEAM device demonstrates the feasibility of terahertz-based electron accelerators, manipulators and diagnostic tools, enabling science beyond current resolution frontiers with transformative impact.
Journal Article
Spectral phase control of interfering chirped pulses for high-energy narrowband terahertz generation
by
Matlis, Nicholas H.
,
Ahr, Frederike
,
Eichner, Timo
in
639/624/1020/1095
,
639/766/400/561
,
Accelerators
2019
Highly-efficient optical generation of narrowband terahertz radiation enables unexplored technologies and sciences from compact electron acceleration to charge manipulation in solids. State-of-the-art conversion efficiencies are currently achieved using difference-frequency generation driven by temporal beating of chirped pulses but remain, however, far lower than desired or predicted. Here we show that high-order spectral phase fundamentally limits the efficiency of narrowband difference-frequency generation using chirped-pulse beating and resolve this limitation by introducing a novel technique based on tuning the relative spectral phase of the pulses. For optical terahertz generation, we demonstrate a 13-fold enhancement in conversion efficiency for 1%-bandwidth, 0.361 THz pulses, yielding a record energy of 0.6 mJ and exceeding previous optically-generated energies by over an order of magnitude. Our results prove the feasibility of millijoule-scale applications like terahertz-based electron accelerators and light sources and solve the long-standing problem of temporal irregularities in the pulse trains generated by interfering chirped pulses.
Optical generation of terahertz radiation is needed for many applications, but gaining high efficiency is still a challenge. The authors report a method to overcome dispersion effects in interfering chirp pulses used for THz pulse production by tuning their relative spectral phase, enabling 0.6 mJ of THz energy output.
Journal Article
Circumventing the Dephasing and Depletion Limits of Laser-Wakefield Acceleration
by
Bussmann, Michael
,
Schramm, Ulrich
,
Debus, Alexander
in
Acceleration
,
Accelerators
,
Defocusing
2019
Compact electron accelerators are paramount to next-generation synchrotron light sources and free-electron lasers, as well as for advanced accelerators at the TeV energy frontier. Recent progress in laser-plasma driven accelerators (LPA) has extended their electron energies to the multi-GeV range and improved beam stability for insertion devices. However, the subluminal group velocity of plasma waves limits the final electron energy that can be achieved in a single LPA accelerator stage, also known as the dephasing limit. Here, we present the first laser-plasma driven electron accelerator concept providing constant acceleration without electrons outrunning the wakefield. The laser driver is provided by an overlap region of two obliquely incident, ultrashort laser pulses with tilted pulse fronts in the line foci of two cylindrical mirrors, aligned to coincide with the trajectory of the accelerated electrons. Such a geometry of laterally coupling the laser into a plasma allows for the overlap region to move with the vacuum speed of light, while the laser fields in the plasma are continuously being replenished by the successive parts of the laser pulses. Our scheme is robust against parasitic self-injection and self-phase modulation as well as drive-laser depletion and defocusing along the accelerated electron beam. It works for a broad range of plasma densities in gas targets. This method opens the way for scaling up electron energies beyond 10 GeV, possibly towards TeV-scale electron beams, without the need for multiple laser-accelerator stages.
Journal Article
Microwave instability threshold from coherent wiggler radiation impedance in storage rings
by
R. Lindberg
,
A. Blednykh
,
M. Blaskiewicz
in
Accelerator Physics
,
mc2-a24-accelerators-and-storage-rings-other - MC2.A24: Accelerators and Storage Rings, Other
,
mc2-photon-sources-and-electron-accelerators - MC2: Photon Sources and Electron Accelerators
2023
Journal Article
Physics of High-Charge Electron Beams in Laser-Plasma Wakefields
2020
Laser wakefield acceleration (LWFA) and its particle-driven counterpart, particle or plasma wakefield acceleration (PWFA), are commonly treated as separate, though related, branches of high-gradient plasma-based acceleration. However, novel proposed schemes are increasingly residing at the interface of both concepts where the understanding of their interplay becomes crucial. Here, we present a comprehensive study of this regime, which we may term laser-plasma wakefields. Using datasets of hundreds of shots, we demonstrate the influence of beam loading on the spectral shape of electron bunches. Similar results are obtained using both 100-TW-class and few-cycle lasers, highlighting the scale invariance of the involved physical processes. Furthermore, we probe the interplay of dual electron bunches in the same or in two subsequent plasma periods under the influence of beam loading. We show that, with decreasing laser intensity, beam loading transitions to a beam-dominated regime, where the first bunch acts as the main driver of the wakefield. This transition is evidenced experimentally by a varying acceleration of a low-energy witness beam with respect to the charge of a high-energy drive beam in a spatially separate gas target. Our results also present an important step in the development of LWFA using controlled injection in a shock front. The electron beams in this study reach record performance in terms of laser-to-beam energy transfer efficiency (up to 10%), spectral charge density (regularly exceeding10pCMeV−1), and angular charge density (beyond300pCμsr−1at 220 MeV). We provide an experimental scaling for the accelerated charge per terawatt (TW) of laser power, which approaches 2 nC at 300 TW. With the expanding availability of petawatt-class (PW) lasers, these beam parameters will become widely accessible. Thus, the physics of laser-plasma wakefields is expected to become increasingly relevant, as it provides new paths toward low-emittance beam generation for future plasma-based colliders or light sources.
Journal Article