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Cherenkov free-electron laser: a critical review and progress report

Technical Report ·
OSTI ID:6503755
Basic scaling relations that apply to Cherenkov free-electron laser operation are summarized, together with a description of a 100-micrometer-wavelength experiment currently in progress. A Cherenkov free-electron laser (C-FEL) consists of a thin, dielectric-film-loaded waveguide resonator and an electron beam with a suitable kinetic energy. When the beam moves parallel to the surface of the dielectric at a velocity greater than the light speed in the film material, it emits both spontaneous and stimulated Cerenkov radiation. When mirrors of sufficient reflectivity are added to the film-guide structure, the stimulated radiation process is unstable. Current modulation on the beam will grow as the beam traverses the resonator. The bunching occurs in the retarding phase of the axial component of the electric field stored in the resonator, and continues to grow until the modulation index approaches unity. At this point beam-electron orbits, viewed from a frame moving with the phase velocity of the wave, no longer progress past wave crests. The film-guide structure supports a TM mode which is evanescent in the direction perpendicular to the guide surface. Thus, as the desired operating wavelength is decreased, an invariant overlap of the beam's transverse profile and the resonator mode can be maintained, provided the beam energy is increased. Reprints.
Research Organization:
Dartmouth Coll., Hanover, NH (USA). Dept. of Physics
OSTI ID:
6503755
Report Number(s):
AD-A-200858/9/XAB
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English