| Literature DB >> 33262360 |
P Karataev1, K Fedorov2,3, G Naumenko3, K Popov3, A Potylitsyn3, A Vukolov3.
Abstract
Nowadays, intense electromagnetic (EM) radiation in the far-infrared (FIR) spectral range is an advanced tool for scientific research in biology, chemistry, and material science because many materials leave signatures in the radiation spectrum. Narrow-band spectral lines enable researchers to investigate the matter response in greater detail. The generation of highly monochromatic variable frequency FIR radiation has therefore become a broad area of research. High energy electron beams consisting of a long train of dense bunches of particles provide a super-radiant regime and can generate intense highly monochromatic radiation due to coherent emission in the spectral range from a few GHz to potentially a few THz. We employed novel coherent Cherenkov diffraction radiation (ChDR) as a generation mechanism. This effect occurs when a fast charged particle moves in the vicinity of and parallel to a dielectric interface. Two key features of the ChDR phenomenon are its non-invasive nature and its photon yield being proportional to the length of the radiator. The bunched structure of the very long electron beam produced spectral lines that were observed to have frequencies upto 21 GHz and with a relative bandwidth of 10-4 ~ 10-5. The line bandwidth and intensity are defined by the shape and length of the bunch train. A compact linear accelerator can be utilized to control the resonant wavelength by adjusting the bunch sequence frequency.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33262360 PMCID: PMC7708415 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-76996-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic layout of the experimental installation. The pre-bunched 6.1 MeV electron beam is generated in a microtron accelerator (5) (see “Methods”). A dipole magnet (4) directs the beam into the experimental area. Two quadrupole magnet doublets (3) shape the beam in the vicinity of the target (2). The target itself is a Teflon triangular prism made such that its output interface is normal to the Cherenkov direction to minimize the refraction deflection shown in the top insertion. The radiation extracted from the target is fed into a multi-octave horn-antenna (1) (see “Methods”). The radiation field induced currents were fed into a high-speed spectrum analyser (see “Methods”) which monitors the radiation spectrum from every train shot-by-shot.
Figure 2Theoretical calculations. (a) The spectral-angular distribution of Cherenkov diffraction radiation calculated for a wavelength of 28.5 mm for a single 6.1 MeV electron passing at an impact parameter of 10 mm away from the Teflon target. The vertical axis is the photon linear frequency f = ω/2π. The horizontal axis is the polar observation angle. The maximum of the angular distribution corresponds to the Cherenkov angle (θch = 46.50 shown with a red arrow) defined by Eq. (1) and refracted due to Snell’s law (for Teflon n = 1.45 in the frequency range of interest); (b) The red line is the normalized form factor of coherent super-radiant Cherenkov diffraction radiation generated by a train of Nb = 104 bunches (6.3 mm long) spaced by 114 mm. The green dashed line is the envelope function defined by a single bunch longitudinal dimension Eq. (4). The train generates a series of monochromatic lines starting from a fundamental frequency of f1 = 2.63 GHz representing the frequency of the accelerating cavity used to boost the energy into the electron beam. The lines are spaced in 2.63 GHz intervals and the intensity goes down for higher harmonics due to the decrease in coherency of each individual bunch. The insertion in Fig. 2b shows the zoomed in section of the 4th intra-train resonance order. The width of the monochromatic line is defined as a distance from the principal maximum to the first minimum and for each line is given as Δf/fk = 1/kNb, where k is the intra-train resonance order, or Δf/f1 = 1/Nb. This expression defines the relative monochromaticity of the radiation. (c) Three trains of the same total charge with a 2.63 GHz bunch sequence frequency: green – short triangular train, red – short flat train, and black – long flat train. (d) The third diffraction order of the Fourier transforms of corresponding trains from Fig. 2c. A longer flat train generates monochromatic radiation with narrower bandwidth.
Figure 3| Experimental results. (a) Six diffraction orders (from 3rd to 8th) of the intra-bunch resonance generated via the Cherenkov diffraction radiation mechanism. The horizontal axis is the photon linear frequency f = ω/2π. The intensity is normalised to the maximum intensity of the 3rd resonance order. The shadowed areas under red dashed lines represent the calculations performed using the polarization current approach[24] and Eq. (3). The red solid lines represent the conversion efficiency of the horn antenna, measured using a Vector Network Analyser (see “Methods”). (b) Relative monochromaticity as a function of the coherent ChDR frequency. The dashed line represents the classic hyperbolic dependence of 1/kNb. (c) The red line represents a single electron ChDR spectrum[24]; Blue dots represent a single electron bunch form factor – this was obtained from the experimental results, i.e. the maxima of each resonance order were normalised to the antenna wavelength efficiency and the single electron spectrum. The form factor was fit with an exponential expression (Eq. 4) to estimate the root-mean-square Gaussian single bunch length, extracted to be 8.16 ± 0.05 mm. The fit is shown by the green dashed line.