Observation of the Stimulated Quantum Cherenkov Effect
Saar Nehemia, Raphael Dahan, Michael Shentcis, Ori Reinhardt, Yuval, Adiv, Kangpeng Wang, Orr Beer, Yaniv Kurman, Xihang Shi, Morgan H. Lynch, and, Ido Kaminer

TL;DR
This paper provides direct experimental evidence of the quantum nature of the Cherenkov effect, demonstrating how relativistic electrons can coherently absorb and emit photons, revealing intrinsic quantum features with potential applications in advanced light sources and electron microscopy.
Contribution
It presents the first direct observation of the quantum Cherenkov effect, showing phase-matching between electron wavefunctions and light, and revealing quantum features in stimulated electron-light interactions.
Findings
Electrons can coherently absorb and emit hundreds of photons.
Phase-matching between electron wavefunction and light wave achieved.
Electron wavefunction evolves into a quantum frequency comb.
Abstract
As charged particles surpass the speed of light in an optical medium they produce radiation - analogously to the way jet planes surpass the speed of sound and produce a sonic boom. This radiation emission, known as the Cherenkov effect, is among the most fundamental processes in electrodynamics. As such, it is used in numerous applications of particle detectors, particle accelerators, light sources, and medical imaging. Surprisingly, all Cherenkov-based applications and experiments thus far were fully described by classical electrodynamics even though theoretical work predicts new Cherenkov phenomena coming from quantum electrodynamics. The quantum description could provide new possibilities for the design of highly controllable light sources and more efficient accelerators and detectors. Here, we provide a direct evidence of the quantum nature of the Cherenkov effect and reveal its…
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