50
An
Ultra Low Emittance DC/RF Photoelectron Gun--Duly Research, Inc., 1912 MacArthur Street, Rancho
Palos Verdes, CA 90275-1111;
310-548-7123
Dr.
David U.L. Yu, Principal Investigator, davidyu@pacbell.net
Dr.
David U.L. Yu, Business Official, davidyu@pacbell.net
DOE
Grant No. DE-FG02-03ER83878
Amount:
$750,000
The
radio frequency (RF) photoinjector is one of the great accelerator inventions in
recent years. Unfortunately, its
performance is limited by space charge effects, particularly at the cathode
where electrons are first created at thermal energies.
The lowest emittance achieved so far is on the order of a few mm-mrad.
However, future linear colliders and 4th generation light
sources require the emittance to be much lower.
In this project, electrons created at a
photocathode will be accelerated through a small (~mm), high-voltage (~250 kV),
short-pulse (<1ns) dc gap to nearly relativistic energies with a very high
accelerating gradient (~GV/m). Immediately
after the rapid dc acceleration, the electron pulse will be injected into an
integrated, emittance compensating, RF cavity for subsequent acceleration.
An order of magnitude or more improvement in beam brightness is expected.
Phase I used simulations to demonstrate that the proposed hybrid
photoinjector can initially accelerate a low emittance electron beam to
relativistic energies with a short pulse, high gradient, electrostatic dc gap,
and that high-energy injection of the beam into several designs of a RF gun
cavity indeed reduces the overall beam emittance by up to an order of magnitude.
Phase II will perform experimental demonstrations of these effects, first
with a 70 kV dc gap alone, and then in conjunction with a ballistic bunch
compression RF cavity. After
completion of the initial tests, a higher voltage (250 kV) transmission line and
dc gun head will be designed, fabricated, and tested in a combined dc/RF gun.
Commercial Applications and Other
Benefits
as described by awardee: An
ultra-low emittance dc/RF gun would simplify the design and/or increase the
luminosity of future linear colliders for high energy physics research.
Also, the dc/RF gun should increase the brightness of 4th
generation light sources that produce ultrafast x-rays for time resolved
materials research, protein crystallography, and advanced medical and industrial
applications.