5 research outputs found
Spectral and spatial shaping of Smith Purcell Radiation
The Smith Purcell effect, observed when an electron beam passes in the
vicinity of a periodic structure, is a promising platform for the generation of
electromagnetic radiation in previously-unreachable spectral ranges. However,
most of the studies of this radiation were performed on simple periodic
gratings, whose radiation spectrum exhibits a single peak and its higher
harmonics predicted by a well-established dispersion relation. Here, we propose
a method to shape the spatial and spectral far-field distribution of the
radiation using complex periodic and aperiodic gratings. We show, theoretically
and experimentally, that engineering multiple peak spectra with controlled
widths located at desired wavelengths is achievable using Smith-Purcell
radiation. Our method opens the way to free-electron driven sources with
tailored angular and spectral response, and gives rise to focusing
functionality for spectral ranges where lenses are unavailable or inefficient