Beating the shot-noise limit

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Abstract

The current shot-noise of an electron beam is proportional to its average current and the frequency bandwidth. This is a consequence of the Poisson distribution statistics of particles emitted at random from any source. Here we demonstrate noise suppression below the shot-noise limit in optical frequencies for relativistic electron beams. This process is made possible by collective Coulomb interaction between the electrons of a cold intense beam during beam drift. The effect was demonstrated by measuring a reduction in optical transition radiation power per unit of electron-beam pulse charge. This finding indicates that the beam charge homogenizes owing to the collective interaction, and its distribution becomes sub-Poissonian. The spontaneous radiation emission from such a beam would also be suppressed (Dicke's subradiance). Therefore, the incoherent spontaneous radiation power of any electron-beam radiation source (such as free-electron lasers) can be suppressed, and the classical coherence limits of seed-injected free-electron lasers may be surpassed. © 2012 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

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APA

Gover, A., Nause, A., Dyunin, E., & Fedurin, M. (2012). Beating the shot-noise limit. Nature Physics, 8(12), 877–880. https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys2443

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