A Helical-Deflector-Based Radio-Frequency Spiral Scanning System for keV Energy Electrons
Simon Zhamkochyan, Vanik Kakoyan, Vardan Bardakhchyan, Sergey Abrahamyan, Amur Margaryan, Aram Kakoyan, Hasmik Rostomyan, Anna Safaryan, Gagik Sughyan, Hayk Gevorgyan, Artashes Papyan, Martin Pinamyan, Mikael Ivanyan, Satoshi N. Nakamura, John Annand, Kenneth Livingston

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel RF helical deflector system for keV electrons that enables controlled spiral scanning with high temporal resolution, validated through modeling and experiments.
Contribution
The work presents a new RF helical deflector design and a theoretical model for spiral electron scanning, demonstrating experimental validation and potential for high-resolution measurements.
Findings
Good agreement between experimental results and theoretical model.
Spiral scanning achieves picosecond temporal resolution.
System operates effectively in 400-1000 MHz range.
Abstract
We present the design, modeling, and experimental validation of a radio-frequency based time-to-position conversion system for keV electrons incorporating a helical deflector operating in the 400-1000 MHz range. The device performs circular deflection of the electrons when driven by a single RF frequency and enables spiral scanning when two phase-locked RF voltages with slightly different frequencies are applied. The superposition of the two phase-locked RF voltages produces an amplitude-beating field whose slowly varying envelope modulates the deflection radius, transforming the circular scan into a controlled spiral on the detector plane. A detailed theoretical model describing the electron dynamics under two phase-locked RF voltages with different frequencies was derived, yielding analytical expressions for the transverse velocity and radius-vector components at the deflector exit.…
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