Revealing the dynamics of ultrarelativistic non-equilibrium many-electron systems with phase space tomography

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Abstract

The description of physical processes with many-particle systems is a key approach to the modeling of numerous physical systems. For example in storage rings, where ultrarelativistic particles are agglomerated in dense bunches, the modeling and measurement of their phase-space distribution is of paramount importance: at any time the phase-space distribution not only determines the complete space-time evolution but also provides fundamental performance characteristics for storage ring operation. Here, we demonstrate a non-destructive tomographic imaging technique for the 2D longitudinal phase-space distribution of ultrarelativistic electron bunches. For this purpose, we utilize a unique setup, which streams turn-by-turn near-field measurements of bunch profiles at MHz repetition rates. To demonstrate the feasibility of our method, we induce a non-equilibrium state and show that the phase-space distribution microstructuring as well as the phase-space distribution dynamics can be observed in great detail. Our approach offers a pathway to control ultrashort bunches and supports, as one example, the development of compact accelerators with low energy footprints.

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Funkner, S., Niehues, G., Nasse, M. J., Bründermann, E., Caselle, M., Kehrer, B., … Müller, A. S. (2023). Revealing the dynamics of ultrarelativistic non-equilibrium many-electron systems with phase space tomography. Scientific Reports, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-31196-5

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