Nanometer emittance ultralow charge beams from rf photoinjectors

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Abstract

In this paper we discuss the generation of a new class of high brightness relativistic electron beams, characterized by ultralow charge (0.1-1 pC) and ultralow normalized emittance (<50nm). These beams are created in rf photoinjectors when the laser is focused on the cathode to very small transverse sizes (<30μm rms). In this regime, the charge density at the cathode approaches the limit set by the extraction electric field. By shaping the laser pulse to have a cigarlike aspect ratio (the longitudinal dimension much larger than the transverse dimension) and a parabolic temporal profile, the resulting space charge dominated dynamics creates a uniformly filled ellipsoidal distribution and the emittance can be nearly preserved to its thermal value. We also present a new method, based on a variation of the pepper-pot technique, for single shot measurements of the ultralow emittances for this new class of beams.

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Li, R. K., Roberts, K. G., Scoby, C. M., To, H., & Musumeci, P. (2012). Nanometer emittance ultralow charge beams from rf photoinjectors. Physical Review Special Topics - Accelerators and Beams, 15(9). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.15.090702

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