81,658 research outputs found
Photoinjector-generation of a flat electron beam with transverse emittance ratio of 100
The generation of a flat electron beam directly from a photoinjector is an
attractive alternative to the electron damping ring as envisioned for linear
colliders. It also has potential applications to light sources such as the
generation of ultra-short x-ray pulses or Smith-Purcell free electron lasers.
In this Letter, we report on the experimental generation of a flat-beam with a
measured transverse emittance ratio of for a bunch charge of
nC; the smaller measured normalized root-mean-square emittance is
m and is limited by the resolution of our experimental setup.
The experimental data, obtained at the Fermilab/NICADD Photoinjector
Laboratory, are compared with numerical simulations and the expected scaling
laws.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Tunable subpicosecond electron bunch train generation using a transverse-to-longitudinal phase space exchange technique
We report on the experimental generation of a train of subpicosecond electron
bunches. The bunch train generation is accomplished using a beamline capable of
exchanging the coordinates between the horizontal and longitudinal degrees of
freedom. An initial beam consisting of a set of horizontally-separated beamlets
is converted into a train of bunches temporally separated with tunable bunch
duration and separation. The experiment reported in this Letter unambiguously
demonstrates the conversion process and its versatility.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in PR
Electrically driven magnetism on a Pd thin film
Using first-principles density functional calculations we demonstrate that
ferromagnetism can be induced and modulated on an otherwise paramagnetic Pd
metal thin-film surface through application of an external electric field. As
free charges are either accumulated or depleted at the Pd surface to screen the
applied electric field there is a corresponding change in the surface density
of states. This change can be made sufficient for the Fermi-level density of
states to satisfy the Stoner criterion, driving a transition locally at the
surface from a paramagnetic state to an itinerant ferromagnetic state above a
critical applied electric field, Ec. Furthermore, due to the second-order
nature of this transition, the surface magnetization of the ferromagnetic state
just above the transition exhibits a substantial dependence on electric field,
as the result of an enhanced magnetoelectric susceptibility. Using a linearized
Stoner model we explain the occurrence of the itinerant ferromagnetism and
demonstrate that the magnetic moment on the Pd surface follows a square-root
variation with electric field consistent with our first-principles
calculations.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Dynamics of photoexcited carriers in graphene
The nonequilibrium dynamics of carriers and phonons in graphene is
investigated by solving the microscopic kinetic equations with the
carrier-phonon and carrier-carrier Coulomb scatterings explicitly included. The
Fermi distribution of hot carriers are found to be established within 100 fs
and the temperatures of electrons in the conduction and valence bands are very
close to each other, even when the excitation density and the equilibrium
density are comparable, thanks to the strong inter-band Coulomb scattering.
Moreover, the temporal evolutions of the differential transmission obtained
from our calculations agree with the experiments by Wang et al. [Appl. Phys.
Lett. 96, 081917 (2010)] and Hale et al. [Phys. Rev. B 83, 121404 (2011)] very
well, with two distinct differential transmission relaxations presented. We
show that the fast relaxation is due to the rapid carrier-phonon thermalization
and the slow one is mainly because of the slow decay of hot phonons. In
addition, it is found that the temperatures of the hot phonons in different
branches are different and the temperature of hot carriers can be even lower
than that of the hottest phonons. Finally, we show that the slow relaxation
rate exhibits a mild valley in the excitation density dependence and is
linearly dependent on the probe-photon energy.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Generation of Relativistic Electron Bunches with Arbitrary Current Distribution via Transverse-to-Longitudinal Phase Space Exchange
We propose a general method for tailoring the current distribution of
relativistic electron bunches. The technique relies on a recently proposed
method to exchange the longitudinal phase space emittance with one of the
transverse emittances. The method consists of transversely shaping the bunch
and then converting its transverse profile into a current profile via a
transverse-to-longitudinal phase-space-exchange beamline. We show that it is
possible to tailor the current profile to follow, in principle, any desired
distributions. We demonstrate, via computer simulations, the application of the
method to generate trains of microbunches with tunable spacing and
linearly-ramped current profiles. We also briefly explore potential
applications of the technique.Comment: 13 pages, 17 figure
Superdeformed Band in ^{36}Ar Described by Projected Shell Model
The projected shell model implements shell model configuration mixing in the
projected deformed basis. Our analysis on the recently observed superdeformed
band in Ar suggests that the neutron and proton 2-quasiparticle and the
4-quasiparticle bands cross the superdeformed ground band at the same angular
momentum. This constitutes a picture of band disturbance in which the first and
the second band-crossing, commonly seen at separate rotation frequencies in
heavy nuclei, occur simultaneously. We also attempt to understand the
assumptions of two previous theoretical calculations which interpreted this
band. Electromagnetic properties of the band are predicted.Comment: 4 pages and 2 figures, accepted by Phys. Rev. C as a Rapid
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