Centre line intensity of a supersonic helium beam
Adri\`a Salvador Palau, Sabrina D. Eder, Truls Andersen, Anders Komar, Ravn, Gianangelo Bracco, Bodil Holst

TL;DR
This study evaluates the quitting surface model's accuracy in predicting the centre line intensity of supersonic helium beams by comparing it with extensive experimental data and ray tracing simulations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive comparison of the quitting surface model with experimental data across various parameters, highlighting its strengths and limitations for different skimmer sizes.
Findings
The model predicts well for skimmers larger than 120 microns.
For smaller skimmers, the trend is correct but absolute values are less accurate.
Ray tracing simulations support the analytical approaches.
Abstract
Supersonic helium beams are used in a wide range of applications, for example surface scattering experiments and, most recently, microscopy. The high ionization potential of neutral helium atoms makes it difficult to build efficient detectors. Therefore, it is important to develop beam sources with a high centre line intensity. Several approaches for predicting the centre line intensity exist, with the quitting surface model incorporating the largest amount of physical dependencies. However, until now only a limited amount of experimental data has been available. Here we present a study where we compare the quitting surface model with an extensive set of experimental data. In the quitting surface model the source is described as a sphere from where the particles leave in a molecular flow determined by Maxwell-Boltzmann statistics. We use numerical solutions of the Boltzmann equation to…
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