[SLAC]
[SLAC Pubs and Reports]
SLAC-R-527
Radiative Cooling of Relativistic Electron Beams
Abstract
Modern high-energy particle accelerators and synchrotron light sources
demand smaller and smaller beam emittances in order to achieve higher
luminosity or better brightness. For light particles such as electrons
and positrons, radiation damping is a natural and effective way to
obtain low emittance beams. However, the quantum aspect of radiation
introduces random noise into the damped beams, yielding equilibrium
emittances which depend upon the design of a specific machine.
In this dissertation, we attempt to make a complete analysis of
the process of radiation damping and quantum excitation in various
accelerator systems, such as bending magnets, focusing channels and
laser fields. Because radiation is formed over a finite time and
emitted in quanta of discrete energies, we invoke the quantum
mechanical approach whenever the quasiclassical picture of radiation
is insufficient. We show that radiation damping in a focusing system
is fundamentally different from that in a bending system. Quantum
excitation to the transverse dimensions is absent in a straight,
continuous focusing channel, and is exponentially suppressed in a
focusing-dominated ring. Thus, the transverse normalized emittances in
such systems can in principle be damped to the Compton wavelength of
the electron, limited only by the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. In
addition, we investigate methods of rapid damping such as radiative
laser cooling. We propose a laser-electron storage ring (LESR) where
the electron beam in a compact storage ring repetitively interacts
with an intense laser pulse stored in an optical resonator. The
laser-electron interaction gives rise to rapid cooling of electron
beams and can be used to overcome the space charge effects encountered
in a medium energy circular machine. Applications to the designs of
low emittance damping rings and compact x-ray sources are also
explored.
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