TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel scheme for a compact coherent x-ray source by confining electrons in a 2D optical lattice, which compensates space-charge effects and significantly enhances radiation efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces a new concept combining optical cavity confinement with electron wiggling to improve x-ray generation, supported by full-wave simulations.
Findings
Confined electrons show three orders of magnitude increase in radiation efficiency.
Space-charge effects are mitigated by electron confinement at optical cavity nodes.
The scheme demonstrates potential for a compact, efficient coherent x-ray source.
Abstract
Compact coherent x-ray sources have been the focus of extensive research efforts over the past decades. As a result, several novel schemes like optical and nano-undulators for generating x-ray emissions in "table-top" setups are proposed, developed, and assessed. Despite the extensive efforts in the past decades, there exists no operational FEL based on optical or electromagnetic undulators. By combining the particle confinement capability of optical cavities with wiggling motion inside an optical undulator, this paper proposes a new concept for making a compact coherent x-ray source. The full-wave solution of first-principle equations based on finite-difference time-domain and particle-in-cell (FDTD/PIC) is performed to simulate inverse-Compton scattering (ICS) off both free and confined electrons. It is shown that the strong space-charge effect in a low-energy electron beam (5 MeV) is…
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