GeV muon beams with picometer-class emittance from electron-photon collisions
C. Curatolo, L. Serafini

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel vacuum-based scheme for generating ultra-low emittance muon beams via electron-photon collisions at around 350 MeV, potentially enabling a new paradigm for future muon colliders.
Contribution
It introduces a new muon production method using electron-photon interactions that results in extremely low emittance muon beams, independent of the initial electron beam emittance.
Findings
Muon beams with nanometer-scale normalized transverse emittance are achievable.
The scheme operates at a center of mass energy around twice the muon pair production threshold.
Potential for a new muon collider design with reduced background and high luminosity.
Abstract
One of the challenge of future muon colliders is the production of muon beams carrying high phase space densities. In particular the muon beam normalised transverse emittance is a relevant figure of merit to meet luminosity requests. A typical issue impacting the achieved transverse emittance in muon collider schemes so far considered is the phase space dilution caused by coulomb interaction of primary particles propagating into the target where muons are generated. In this study we present a new scheme for muon beam generation occurring in vacuum by interactions of electron and photon beams. Setting the center of mass energy at about twice the threshold (i.e. around MeV) the normalised emittance of the muon beam generated via muon pair production reaction () is largely independent on the emittance of the colliding electron beam and is set…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Particle accelerators and beam dynamics · Particle Detector Development and Performance
