206,210 research outputs found
Stationary and impulsive injection of electron beams in converging magnetic field
In this work we study time-dependent precipitation of an electron beam
injected into a flaring atmosphere with a converging magnetic field by
considering collisional and Ohmic losses with anisotropic scattering and pitch
angle diffusion. Two injection regimes are investigated: short impulse and
stationary injection. The effects of converging magnetic fields with different
spatial profiles are compared and the energy deposition produced by the
precipitating electrons at different depths and regimes is calculated. The time
dependent Fokker-Planck equation for electron distribution in depth, energy and
pitch angle was solved numerically by using the summary approximation method.
It was found that steady state injection is established for beam electrons at
0.07-0.2 seconds after the injection onset depending on the initial beam
parameters. Energy deposition by a stationary beam is strongly dependent on a
self-induced electric field but less on a magnetic field convergence. Energy
depositions by short electron impulses are found to be insensitive to the
self-induced electric field but are strongly affected by a magnetic
convergence. Short beam impulses are shown to produce sharp asymmetric hard
X-ray bursts within a millisecond timescale often observed in solar flares.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figures, Astronomy and Astrophysics (accepted
The NSNS High Energy Beam Transport Line
In the National Spallation Neutron Source (NSNS) design, a 180 meter long
transport line connects the 1 GeV linac to an accumulator ring. The linac beam
has a current of 28 mA, pulse length of 1 ms, and 60 Hz rep rate. The high
energy transport line consists of sixteen 60 degrees FODO cells, and
accommodates a 90 degrees achromatic bend, an energy compressor, collimators,
part of injection system, and enough diagnostic devices to measure the beam
quality before injection. To reduce the uncontrolled beam losses, this line has
nine beam halo scrapers and very tight tolerances on both transverse and
longitudinal beam dynamics under space charge conditions. The design of this
line is presented.Comment: 3 pages, transfer line desig
Line spread instrumentation for propagation measurements
A line spread device capable of yielding direct measure of a laser beam's line spread function (LSF) was developed and employed in propagation tests conducted in a wind tunnel to examine optimal acoustical suppression techniques for laser cavities exposed to simulated aircraft aerodynamic environments. Measurements were made on various aerodynamic fences and cavity air injection techniques that effect the LSF of a propagating laser. Using the quiescent tunnel as a control, the relative effect of each technique on laser beam quality was determined. The optical instrument employed enabled the comparison of relative beam intensity for each fence or mass injection. It was found that fence height had little effect on beam quality but fence porosity had a marked effect, i.e., 58% porosity alleviated cavity resonance and degraded the beam the least. Mass injection had little effect on the beam LSF. The use of a direct LSF measuring device proved to be a viable means of determining aerodynamic seeing qualities of flow fields
Spatially probed electron-electron scattering in a two-dimensional electron gas
Using scanning gate microscopy (SGM), we probe the scattering between a beam
of electrons and a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) as a function of the
beam's injection energy, and distance from the injection point. At low
injection energies, we find electrons in the beam scatter by small-angles, as
has been previously observed. At high injection energies, we find a surprising
result: placing the SGM tip where it back-scatters electrons increases the
differential conductance through the system. This effect is explained by a
non-equilibrium distribution of electrons in a localized region of 2DEG near
the injection point. Our data indicate that the spatial extent of this highly
non-equilibrium distribution is within ~1 micrometer of the injection point. We
approximate the non-equilibrium region as having an effective temperature that
depends linearly upon injection energy.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
- …
