Evidence of Wigner Rotation Phenomena in the Beam Splitting Experiment at the LCLS
Gianluca Geloni, Vitali Kocharyan, Evgeni Saldin

TL;DR
This paper reports the first direct observation of Wigner rotation effects in a relativistic electron beam at the LCLS, linking fundamental physics phenomena to practical free-electron laser experiments.
Contribution
It demonstrates that Wigner rotation, a fundamental relativistic effect, can be observed in macroscopic ultrarelativistic electron beams, providing new insights into beam dynamics in FELs.
Findings
Wigner rotation was directly recorded in an ultrarelativistic electron bunch.
The microbunching wave vector projection onto the beam velocity is Lorentz invariant.
Experimental evidence supports the relativistic kinematic explanation of wavefront rotation.
Abstract
A result from particle tracking states that, after a microbunched electron beam is kicked, its trajectory changes while the orientation of the microbunching wavefront remains as before. Experiments at the LCLS showed that radiation in the kicked direction is produced practically without suppression. This could be explained if the orientation of the microbunching wavefront is readjusted along the kicked direction. In previous papers we showed that when the evolution of the electron beam modulation is treated according to relativistic kinematics, the orientation of the microbunching wavefront in the ultrarelativistic asymptotic is always perpendicular to the electron beam velocity. There we refrained from using advanced theoretical concepts to explain or analyze the wavefront rotation. For example, we only hinted to the relation of this phenomenon with the concept of Wigner rotation. This…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Quantum and Classical Electrodynamics
