Spatial and temporal distribution of a 1-MeV proton microbeam guided through a poly(tetrafluoroethylene) macrocapillary
G. U. L. Nagy, Z. T. Ga\'al, I. Rajta, K. T\H{o}k\'esi

TL;DR
This paper uses computer simulations combining stochastic and deterministic methods to analyze the spatial and temporal behavior of a 1-MeV proton microbeam passing through a macrocapillary, aligning well with previous experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive simulation model that accurately describes proton transmission through macrocapillaries, including different phases of beam evolution and guiding effects.
Findings
Simulation matches experimental observations
Different atomic processes dominate at various transmission phases
Guided transmission results in a focused beam with preserved energy
Abstract
We present computer simulations about the spatial and temporal evolution of a 1-MeV proton microbeam transmitted through an insulating macrocapillary with the length of 45 mm and with the inner diameter of 800 {\mu}m. The axis of the capillary was tilted to 1{\deg} relative to the axis of the incident beam, which ensured geometrical nontransparency. The simulation is based on the combination of stochastic (Monte Carlo) and deterministic methods. It involves (1) random sampling of the initial conditions, according to distributions generated by the widely used and freely available computer software packages, SRIM and WINTRAX, (2) the numerical solution of the governing equations for following the classical trajectory of the projectiles, and (3) the description of the field-driven charge migration on the surface and in the bulk of the insulator material. We found that our simulation…
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