Nuclear Photonics
D. Habs, M.M. Guenther, M. Jentschel, P.G. Thirolf

TL;DR
The paper discusses advancements in gamma-beam technology, highlighting new facilities, experimental observations of g-beam refraction, and potential applications in nuclear physics, medicine, energy, and security.
Contribution
It introduces new gamma-beam facilities with higher brilliance and spectral flux, and demonstrates the first observation of g-beam refraction due to virtual pair creation, opening new application avenues.
Findings
Observation of g-beam refraction caused by virtual pair creation.
Development of efficient monochromators for gamma-beams.
Potential for deep penetration and high-resolution imaging in nuclear applications.
Abstract
With new gamma-beam facilities like MEGa-ray at LLNL (USA) or ELI-NP at Bucharest with 10^13 g/s and a bandwidth of Delta E_g/E_g ~10^-3, a new era of g-beams with energies <=20 MeV comes into operation, compared to the present world-leading HIGS facility (Duke Univ., USA) with 10^8 g/s and Delta E_g/E_g~0.03. Even a seeded quantum FEL for g-beams may become possible, with much higher brilliance and spectral flux. At the same time new exciting possibilities open up for focused g-beams. We describe a new experiment at the g-beam of the ILL reactor (Grenoble), where we observed for the first time that the index of refraction for g-beams is determined by virtual pair creation. Using a combination of refractive and reflective optics, efficient monochromators for g-beams are being developed. Thus we have to optimize the system of the g-beam facility, the g-beam optics and g-detectors. We can…
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