Demonstration of Low Emittance in the Cornell Energy Recovery Linac Injector Prototype
Colwyn Gulliford, Adam Bartnik, Ivan Bazarov, Luca Cultrera, John, Dobbins, Bruce Dunham, Francisco Gonzalez, Siddharth Karkare, Hyeri Lee, Heng, Li, Yulin Li, Xianghong Liu, Jared Maxson, Christian Nguyen, Karl Smolenski,, and Zhi Zhao

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the achievement of low emittance electron beams in the Cornell ERL photoinjector, with detailed measurements and simulations showing significant improvements in beam quality for high-current applications.
Contribution
The study provides the first detailed measurement and simulation validation of low emittance electron beams in a high-repetition-rate ERL photoinjector, advancing high-brightness beam technology.
Findings
Measured 90% normalized transverse emittance of 0.23 microns at 19 pC
Achieved emittance values significantly lower than existing storage rings
Validated simulation models with experimental data
Abstract
We present a detailed study of the six-dimensional phase space of the electron beam produced by the Cornell Energy Recovery Linac Photoinjector, a high-brightness, high repetition rate (1.3 GHz) DC photoemission source designed to drive a hard x-ray energy recovery linac (ERL). A complete simulation model of the injector has been constructed, verified by measurement, and optimized. Both the horizontal and vertical 2D transverse phase spaces, as well as the time-resolved (sliced) horizontal phase space, were simulated and directly measured at the end of the injector for 19 pC and 77 pC bunches at roughly 8 MeV. These bunch charges were chosen because they correspond to 25 mA and 100 mA average current if operating at the full 1.3 GHz repetition rate. The resulting 90% normalized transverse emittances for 19 (77) pC/bunch were 0.23 +/- 0.02 (0.51 +/- 0.04) microns in the horizontal plane,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotocathodes and Microchannel Plates · Particle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · X-ray Spectroscopy and Fluorescence Analysis
