Terahertz-driven linear electron acceleration
Emilio Alessandro Nanni, Wenqian Ronny Huang, Kyung-Han Hong,, Koustuban Ravi, Arya Fallahi, Gustavo Moriena, R. J. Dwayne Miller, Franz, X. K\"artner

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the first linear electron acceleration using terahertz pulses, achieving keV energy gain, and highlights the potential for high-gradient, compact accelerators across various scientific and medical applications.
Contribution
First demonstration of linear electron acceleration with terahertz pulses, enabling high-gradient, compact accelerators with broad scientific and medical applications.
Findings
Achieved keV energy gain with THz-driven acceleration.
Enabled high-gradient acceleration in the GV/m range.
Potential for transformative impact in multiple fields.
Abstract
The cost, size and availability of electron accelerators is dominated by the achievable accelerating gradient. Conventional high-brightness radio-frequency (RF) accelerating structures operate with 30-50 MeV/m gradients. Electron accelerators driven with optical or infrared sources have demonstrated accelerating gradients orders of magnitude above that achievable with conventional RF structures. However, laser-driven wakefield accelerators require intense femtosecond sources and direct laser-driven accelerators and suffer from low bunch charge, sub-micron tolerances and sub-femtosecond timing requirements due to the short wavelength of operation. Here, we demonstrate the first linear acceleration of electrons with keV energy gain using optically-generated terahertz (THz) pulses. THz-driven accelerating structures enable high-gradient electron or proton accelerators with simple…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
