494 research outputs found
Armenia: demographic challenges
Shavarsh Kocharya
On quantum effects in spontaneous emission by a relativistic electron beam in an undulator
Robb and Bonifacio (2011) claimed that a previously neglected quantum effect
results in noticeable changes in the evolution of the energy distribution
associated with spontaneous emission in long undulators. They revisited
theoretical models used to describe the emission of radiation by relativistic
electrons as a continuous diffusive process, and claimed that in the asymptotic
limit for a large number of undulator periods the evolution of the electron
energy distribution occurs as discrete energy groups according to Poisson
distribution. We show that these novel results have no physical sense, because
they are based on a one-dimensional model of spontaneous emission and assume
that electrons are sheets of charge. However, electrons are point-like
particles and, as is well-known, the bandwidth of the angular-integrated
spectrum of undulator radiation is independent of the number of undulator
periods. If we determine the evolution of the energy distribution using a
three-dimensional theory we find the well-known results consistent with a
continuous diffusive process. The additional pedagogical purpose of this paper
is to review how quantum diffusion of electron energy in an undulator with
small undulator parameter can be simply analyzed using the Thomson
cross-section expression, unlike the conventional treatment based on the
expression for the Lienard-Wiechert fields
Improvement of the crossed undulator design for effective circular polarization control in X-ray FELs
The production of X-ray radiation with a high degree of circular polarization
constitutes an important goal at XFEL facilities. A simple scheme to obtain
circular polarization control with crossed undulators has been proposed so far.
In its simplest configuration the crossed undulators consist of pair of short
planar undulators in crossed position separated by an electromagnetic phase
shifter. An advantage of this configuration is a fast helicity switching. A
drawback is that a high degree of circular polarization (over 90%) can only be
achieved for lengths of the insertion devices significantly shorter than the
gain length, i.e. at output power significantly lower than the saturation power
level. The obvious and technically possible extension considered in this paper,
is to use a setup with two or more crossed undulators separated by phase
shifters. This cascade crossed undulator scheme is distinguished, in
performance, by a fast helicity switching, a high degree of circular
polarization (over 95%) and a high output power level, comparable with the
saturation power level in the baseline undulator at fundamental wavelength. We
present feasibility study and exemplifications for the LCLS baseline in the
soft X-ray regime
Extension of self-seeding scheme with single crystal monochromator to lower energy < 5 keV as a way to generate multi-TW scale pulses at the European XFEL
We propose a use of the self-seeding scheme with single crystal monochromator
to produce high power, fully-coherent pulses for applications at a dedicated
bio-imaging beamline at the European X-ray FEL in the photon energy range
between 3.5 keV and 5 keV. We exploit the C(111) Bragg reflection
(pi-polarization) in diamond crystals with a thickness of 0.1 mm, and we show
that, by tapering the 40 cells of the SASE3 type undulator the FEL power can
reach up to 2 TW in the entire photon energy range. The present design assumes
the use of a nominal electron bunch with charge 0.1 nC at nominal electron beam
energy 17.5 GeV. The main application of the scheme proposed in this work is
for single shot imaging of individual protein molecules
Superexchange in Dilute Magnetic Dielectrics: Application to (Ti,Co)O_2
We extend the model of ferromagnetic superexchange in dilute magnetic
semiconductors to the ferromagnetically ordered highly insulating compounds
(dilute magnetic dielectrics). The intrinsic ferromagnetism without free
carriers is observed in oxygen-deficient films of anatase TiO_2 doped with
transition metal impurities in cation sublattice. We suppose that ferromagnetic
order arises due to superexchange between complexes [oxygen vacancies +
magnetic impurities], which are stabilized by charge transfer from vacancies to
impurities. The Hund rule controls the superexchange via empty vacancy related
levels so that it becomes possible only for the parallel orientation of
impurity magnetic moments. The percolation threshold for magnetic ordering is
determined by the radius of vacancy levels, but the exchange mechanism does not
require free carriers. The crucial role of the non-stoichiometry in formation
of the ferromagnetism makes the Curie temperatures extremely sensitive to the
methods of sample preparation.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figure
Theoretical computation of the polarization characteristics of an X-ray Free-Electron Laser with planar undulator
We show that radiation pulses from an X-ray Free-Electron Laser (XFEL) with a
planar undulator, which are mainly polarized in the horizontal direction,
exhibit a suppression of the vertical polarization component of the power at
least by a factor , where is the length
of the undulator period and is the FEL field gain length. We illustrate
this fact by examining the XFEL operation under the steady state assumption. In
our calculations we considered only resonance terms: in fact, non resonance
terms are suppressed by a factor and can be
neglected. While finding a situation for making quantitative comparison between
analytical and experimental results may not be straightforward, the qualitative
aspects of the suppression of the vertical polarization rate at XFELs should be
easy to observe. We remark that our exact results can potentially be useful to
developers of new generation FEL codes for cross-checking their results
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