Overview and Issues of Experimental Observation of Microbunching Instabilities
Alex H. Lumpkin

TL;DR
This paper reviews the experimental observation, characterization, and mitigation of microbunching instabilities in high-brightness electron beams, highlighting effects across various accelerators and diagnostic challenges posed by coherent optical transition radiation.
Contribution
It provides an updated overview of microbunching instability observations in different linacs, including evidence from both photocathode and thermionic cathode injectors, and discusses diagnostic advancements and challenges.
Findings
Microbunching effects observed in multiple accelerator facilities.
COTR can mask true beam profiles, complicating diagnostics.
Efforts are ongoing to model and mitigate microbunching effects.
Abstract
The generation of the ultra-bright beams required by modern accelerators and drivers of free-electron lasers (FELs) has generally relied on chicane-based bunch compressions that often result in the microbunching instability. Following compression, spectral enhancements extend even into the visible wavelengths through the longitudinal space charge (LSC) impedances. Optical transition radiation (OTR) screens have been extensively used for transverse electron beam size measurements for the bright beams, but the presence of such longitudinal microstructures (microbunching) in the electron beam or the leading edge spikes can result in strong, localized coherent enhancements (COTR) that mask the actual beam profile. Generally, we have observed effects in rf photocathode (PC) injected linacs with chicane compressions since an R56 term is needed. In the past COTR had been only reported in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Photocathodes and Microchannel Plates · Particle accelerators and beam dynamics
