[0001] The United States Government has rights in this invention pursuant to Contract No.
DE-AC52-07NA27344 between the U.S. Department of Energy and Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC,
for the operation of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field of the Invention
[0002] The present invention relates to Compton light sources, and more specifically, it
relates to pulse formats and interaction geometries that produce ultra narrow bandwidth
(10E-3 or lower) and high beam flux quasi-mono-energetic x-rays and gamma rays.
Description of Related Art
[0003] Gamma-rays and x-rays can be produced via laser Compton scattering in which an energetic
laser pulse collides with a relativistic bunch of electrons which have been produced
by a particle accelerator. The output of this interaction is up-shifted light that
is directed in the direction of the electron beam. The energy of the up-shifted light
in a head-on collision is equal to the incident laser photon energy multiplied by
4 times the normalized energy of the electron squared. Up-shifts of a million can
be created by electrons with energy of a few hundred MeV. The scattered light is polarized
and tunable by changing either the color of the laser photon or the energy of the
electron bunch. The output is polychromatic but with a spectrum that is angle correlated.
By passing the beam through a narrow aperture a quasi-mono-energetic beam can be created
with a bandwidth that is dependent linearly upon the laser bandwidth, linearly upon
the electron bunch energy spread and upon the focusing geometry of the electron beam
and the laser beam.
[0004] Laser-Compton light sources have been constructed primarily to create short duration
x-rays or tunable, relatively broadband x-rays. In these systems, the laser pulse
duration is of order or shorter in duration than that of the electron bunch and both
are focused to a small spot in order to maximize the interaction and the total photon
yield. The Compton scattering cross section (also known as the Thomson cross section)
is very small, ~ 6×10
-25 cm
2. Note in Compton scattering, of the order of 10
19 laser photons interact with the order of 10
10 electrons to produce of the order of 10
10 up-scattered x-rays or gamma-rays. To first order, no laser photons are used. Because
of the tight focus, the longitudinal transit time of the electrons through the focal
region is typically of order the duration of the electron bunch. In this scenario
the laser pulse and electron bunch timing must be carefully adjusted so that both
pulses overlap at a common focus in space. Furthermore both the laser pulse energy
and the electron beam charge are made as high as practical to increase the probability
of interaction and the flux of the outgoing beam. This process can also be used to
make gamma-rays simply by increasing the energy of the electron beam. The generation
of gamma-rays can be more efficient in that higher energy electron beams can be focused
to smaller spots, thus producing more up-scattered photons. Because of the large laser
bandwidth used, the relatively large energy spread of the high charge electron bunches
and the tight focusing geometries employed in these systems, the fractional bandwidth
of typical laser Compton light sources has been of order 10%. (Measurements from systems
at Duke University, the Japanese Atomic Research Agency in Japan and at Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory (LLNL) are in this range)
[0005] However for many gamma-ray applications the primary beam quality of interest is not
beam pulse duration or even total beam flux but is instead gamma-ray bandwidth. It
is desirable to provide gamma-rays with fractional bandwidths of 10E-3 or less for
use to uniquely excite narrow band (10E-6) nuclear resonances that are unique signatures
of isotopes. By monitoring the absorption of resonance photons from such a laser-Compton
gamma-ray beam, one can detect, assay or image the presence of specific isotopes in
complex systems. Applications include homeland security, nuclear fuel management,
industrial materials processing and medical therapy and radiography.
[0006] Luo W. et al. : "X-ray generation from slanting laser-Compton scattering for future
energy-tunable Shanghai Laser Electron Gamma Source", APPLIED PHYSICS B; LASERS AND
OPTICS, SPRINGER, BERLIN, DE, relates to generation of energy-tunable, bright, short-pulse X/γ-ray sources,
which are required in various research fields. As described, Laser-Compton scattering
(LCS) is considered to be one of the most promising methods to implement this kind
of X/γ-ray source. At the 100-MeV LINAC of Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics,
a 2-J, 8-ns, 1064-nm, Q-switched Nd:YAG laser is brought to a slanting collision at
40° (44°) with an 112-MeV, 0.9-ns (rms) relativistic electron beam. Further, the LCS
X-ray energy spectrum with a peak energy of 31.73 +/-0.22
stat +/- 1.64
syst keV and a peak width (rms) of 0.74 +/- 0.26
stat +/- 0.03
syst keV was measured. This preliminary investigation was carried out to understand the
feasibility of developing an energy-tunable X/γ-ray source. Based on this study, the
future Laser Electron Gamma Source (SLEGS) at the Shanghai Synchrotron Radiation Facility
(SSRF) can be constructed to be not only an energy-tunable γ-ray source by guiding
the laser incident angle from laser-Compton scattering, but also a high flux (~10
10 photons/s or even higher) γ-ray source by adding super-cavity.
[0007] US 6,332,017 B1 relates to a system for generating tunable pulsed monochromatic X-rays comprising
a tabletop terawatt laser delivering 10 Joules of energy in 10 ps at a wavelength
of 1.1 microns. The light beam from the laser is counter-propagated against an electron
beam produced by a linear accelerator. X-ray photons are generated by inverse Compton
scattering that occurs as a consequence of the "collision" that occurs between the
electron beam and IR photons generated by the laser.The system uses a novel pulse
structure comprising, in a preferred embodiment, a single micropulse. The LINAC is
configured to generate an electron beam having 1 nanocoulomb of charge in a microbunch
having a pulse length of about 5 picoseconds or less (or an electron beam brightness
of 1012 A/m2-radian2@ 500 A). A beam alignment sub-system is used at the laser beam-electron
beam interaction zone and directs the X-ray beam, in a preferred embodiment, through
a beryllium window and onto mosaic crystals which divert the beam into a beam transport
system toward the imaging target.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0008] The invention produces high flux beams of bright, tunable, polarized quasimonoenergetic
x-rays or gamma-rays via laser-Compton scattering x-ray or gamma-ray. An electron
source generates a train of spaced electron bunches and an RF linear accelerator accelerated
the electron bunches into a laser-electron beam interaction region. The transit time
of each of the accelerated electron bunches through the laser-electron beam interaction
region is both greater than the duration of the accelerated electron bunch and greater
than the spacing between electron bunches. A laser system is adapted to produce a
laser pulse having a duration at least as long as a transit time of the laser pulse
through the laser-electron beam interaction region. The laser system is arranged so
that the laser pulse traverses the laser-electron beam interaction region to interact
with all of the accelerated electron bunches of the train. In some embodiments, the
duration of the laser pulse is substantially equal to at least a total length of the
train of spaced electron bunches so that a single pass of the laser pulse through
the laser-electron beam interaction region interacts with all of the accelerated electron
bunches of the train. In other embodiments, the duration of the laser pulse is substantially
equal to a sub-multiple of a total length of the train of spaced electron bunches.
The laser system is arranged to recirculate the laser pulse through the laser-electron
beam interaction region for a predetermined number of passes equal to an inverse of
the sub-multiple. The spacing frequency of the electron bunches can the same as or
correlated to the RF frequency of the RF linear accelerator so that an electron bunch
is present for every cycle of said RF frequency.
[0009] The invention is useful in the generation of narrowband, high flux mono-energetic
gamma-rays and x-rays. Uses of the gamma-rays include isotope specific material detection,
assay and imaging via excitation of nuclear resonance fluorescence, photo-fission
of materials, medical imaging and therapy. X-ray uses include precision radiography,
low dose radiography and targeted radio-therapy
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0010] The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated into and form a part of the disclosure,
illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the description, serve
to explain the principles of the invention.
Figure 1 shows the basic components of an embodiment of the invention.
Figures 2 through 6 illustrate aspects of the operation of an embodiment of the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0011] The invention provides a new pulse format and interaction geometry that produces
both ultra-narrow bandwidth (10E-3 or lower) and high beam flux quasi-mono-energetic
x-rays and gamma-rays. The basic idea has three components: 1) distribute the charge
of the electron bunch over many smaller charge bunches, 2) increase the focal spot
size of the interaction so that the transit time of the electron bunch through the
interaction region is significantly longer than the duration of the electron bunch
and significantly longer than the spacing between successive electron bunches and
3) use a long duration laser pulse whose pulse duration is chosen to be as long or
longer than the transit time of the laser through the interaction region. In this
way one laser pulse can interact with many (e.g., 100 or more) electron bunches at
one time thus producing a high flux (in fact higher than the conventional geometry
if the laser energy is adjusted correctly). Furthermore the long duration laser pulse
has narrower bandwidth than short duration laser pulses thus the gamma-ray bandwidth
contribution from the laser is reduced (typically by a 1000 fold). Furthermore because
the bunch charge of the electrons is smaller, the space charge dependent energy dispersion
of the bunch is smaller and the energy spread is smaller, thus the e-beam contribution
to the gamma-ray bandwidth is reduced (typically by a factor of 10 or more). Further,
because the bunch charge is smaller, the quality of the electron beam is higher, i.e.,
the emittance which is typically proportional to square root of charge is lower. Lower
emittance beams can be focused to a given spot size for a longer length. This leads
to a longer and more collimated laser-electron beam interaction which in turn reduces
the focusing contribution to gamma-ray bandwidth (typically another factor of 10).
Finally because the electron beam and laser foci are relatively large and the laser
pulse duration is relatively long, the intensity of the laser pulse in the interaction
region is reduced (100 fold or more) and thus non-linear effects which tend to broaden
the bandwidth of gamma-ray sources are also reduced dramatically. One might not need
to focus the electron beam at all out of the accelerator, only the laser beam. In
some x-band structures the beam diameter can be 100 microns right out of the device
and this is approximately the laser diameter in the focal region. Not having to focus
the electron beam means that there is no need for focusing quadrupoles, thus saving
space and complexity.
[0012] Figure 1 shows the basic components of an embodiment of the invention. A laser system
in enclosure
10 is configured to drive a photo-gun of a linear accelerator
12. A fiber optic
14 (or other bulk optical arrangement) is provided to transport light from the laser
system to an amplifier in enclosure
16. Light from the amplifier is then directed to a frequency conversion means in enclosure
17 to convert the light to an appropriate UV wavelength to drive the photo-gun. The
e-beam output from the linear accelerator
12 is directed into an interaction chamber
18. The interaction chamber includes an interaction region and re-circulating optics
and discussed below. An e-beam deflector
20 is provided to direct any residual e-beam toward a beam stop
22.
[0013] Referring still to Figure 1, a laser system in enclosure
30 is configured to provide a long pulse length laser pulse which is directed by a fiber
optic
32 (or other bulk optical arrangement) to an amplifier in enclosure
34. The beam from amplifier
34 is directed by mirror
35 through a beam splitter and through a frequency converter (the frequency converter
could be omitted and the direct laser beam used if lower energy x-rays or gamma-rays
are desired) in interaction chamber
18 and into the oncoming e-beam. The laser beam interacts with the e-beam to produce
x-rays or gamma rays.
[0014] Figures 2 through 7 illustrate aspects of the operation of an embodiment of the invention.
Laser system
10 provides mode-locked pulses
100 into fiber optic
14. Pulses
100 are provided at a frequency that is matched to the RF frequency of the linear accelerator
12, nominally 10 GHz. Alternately, an approximately 10 GHz laser pulse train can be generated
by modulation of a CW laser via high speed electro-optic components driven by the
accelerator RF frequency or a multiple thereof. Subsequent non-linear effects can
be used to reduce the pulse duration of the individual 10 GHz pulses to durations
required to produce bright electron bunches from the photo-cathode, e.g., approximately
1 ps. Synchronization of the mode locked laser and the accelerator RF must be on the
order of a fraction of the pulse duration of the pulse hitting the cathode, i.e.,
nominally 100 fs accuracy. The wavelength of the light from laser system
10 is 1053 nm in this embodiment.
[0015] Figure 3 shows pulses
100 passing through amplifier enclosure
16 and then through conversion means enclosure
17 from which pulses
100 are directed into linear accelerator
12. The wavelength used to drive the photo-gun is in the UV and depends upon the cathode
material used. If the cathode material is copper, then the wavelength would be the
4th harmonic of 1053 nm. If the cathode material is magnesium, then the wavelength
would be the 3rd harmonic of 1053 nm. The pulse duration is nominally a 2 ps square
pulse with a 100 fs rise and fall. Other pulse shapes are also possible and depend
upon the cathode design and cathode dynamics. The laser drive pulse repetition rate
is the same as the RF of the accelerator. The inventors have used the SLAC x-band
standard of 11.424 GHz but the invention would work for an arbitrary repetition rate.
If the repetition rate is too slow, then the spacing of the electron bunches becomes
too big and might be larger than the transit time through the interaction region.
Higher repetition is possible but good accelerator structures beyond about 12 GHz
have not yet been demonstrated. The energy of the laser drive pulses depends upon
the cathode material quantum efficiency. For copper, about 50 microJoules per pulse
are needed. Magnesium is 10x more efficient and thus, only around 5 microJoules are
needed. These energies may vary by factors of 2 to 4 depending upon the accelerator
structure. Basically, as much charge is placed in each bunch as possible without destroying
the electron beam emmittance. The quality of the gammas scale as the charge/emmittance
2, but the total flux is proportional to the charge. Amplifier 16 can in principle
be done with either a bulk amplifier or a fiber amplifier or a combination of both.
Because copper cathodes require more energy, it is likely that we would need a bulk
amplifier at the end after the fiber preamplifiers. If a magnesium cathode is used,
the pulses can be generated using only fiber laser amplifiers (obviously an advantage).
The photo-gun is not shown, but is known in the art. One embodiment photo gun provide
25 pC charge electron bunches. The photogun must produce electrons in each RF bucket
(i.e., each acceleration cycle) that are nominally the same charge, with identical
energy and beam emmittance. For purposes of this embodiment, the energies are identical
if there is substantially no variation beyond about 10E-3. When the invention is used
to make x-rays, a larger variation from bunch to bunch is tolerable.
[0016] In single bunch mode at x-band frequencies, the bunch charge should be ~250 pC. An
embodiment of the invention in the multi-bunch mode of this invention is set up to
operate at nominally 1/10th the bunch charge, i.e., 25 pC. Electron perturbations
and issues in the accelerator scale in proportion to the square of the bunch charge
so for the multi-bunch mode, these issues will be nominally 100x smaller.
[0017] Referring still to Figure 3, laser system
30 is a Nd:YAG laser configured to provide a long pulse
110 at a wavelength of about 1064 nm. The laser system
30 is configured to provide sufficient energy and high average power. The intensity
is in the joule per pulse range for a 10 ns pulse. The bandwidth is less than the
desired gamma-ray bandwidth, typically 10E-3. This bandwidth is easy for a 10 ns pulse.
Note that the use of narrower bandwidth is not beneficial because the interaction
geometry also broadens the gamma-ray bandwidth by of order 10E-3. The exact laser
pulse energy is dependent upon the interaction region focal spot size and length (the
spot size and length are tied to each other via diffraction relations). Embodiments
of a symmetric mode Compton source known as T-REX had a small spot size (~20 microns)
and short confocal interaction region (cm's). The present embodiment uses focal spots
of >100 microns and interaction lengths of order a meter or greater. As sown in Figure
4, the laser pulse energy of pulse
110 is amplified by the amplifier, which is configured to produce between 1 to 10 Joules.
[0018] As shown in Figure 5, after amplification, pulse
110 is directed into interaction chamber
18 where it passes through a the beamsplitter and the conversion element to then be
reflected into the path of the oncoming electron bunches
118. As shown in Figure 6, the pulse
110 is recirculated within the interaction chamber
18. The laser pulse duration is chosen to be equal to the total length of the total electron
bunch train (also known as the macro-bunch length) or some integer sub-multiple of
the bunch train length. One could artificially create an 87.5 ns interaction with
shorter duration laser pulses by collecting the laser light after the interaction
region and re-circulating it to interact with subsequent electron bunches. The cavity
can be constructed out of high reflective mirrors, one polarizer and a pockels cell.
Pulse
110 consisting of polarized light can be injected into the cavity via the polarizer.
The polarization is then be rotated 90 degrees by the Pockels cell and the light would
is trapped. The scattered light is polarized and tunable by changing either the color
of the laser photon or the energy of the electron bunch. The output is polychromatic
but with a spectrum that is angle correlated. By passing the beam through a narrow
aperture a quasi-mono-energetic beam can be created with a bandwidth that is dependent
linearly upon the laser bandwidth, linearly upon the electron bunch energy spread
and upon the focusing geometry of the electron beam and the laser beam. As shown in
Figure 7, the pulse
110 continues to circulate through the cavity to interact with the remainder of the electron
bunches.
[0019] In practice, this configuration has been dubbed the "fill every bucket" configuration
since ultimately one would put electrons in every "RF" bucket of the accelerator structure,
i.e., there would be one electron bunch for every cycle of the RF frequency driving
the accelerator. Because the length of the focal region is constrained by geometrical
optics and free space diffraction of laser beams, in practice the laser-electron interaction
is not a free parameter and is typically 1 meter in length. For this reason it is
advantageous to operate the accelerator at as high an RF frequency as practical. Accelerator
operation is limited by field-driven breakdown of accelerator structures and this
in turn depends upon frequency. The highest practical frequency that accelerators
currently operate is x-band (nominally 12 GHz). The invention has been designed with
devices that operate in the x-band at 11.424 GHz. At this frequency the spacing between
electron bunches is 87.5 ps or approximately 3 cm separation in space. Thus a 1 meter
focal interaction region will contain at any one time approximately 34 electron bunches.
The laser pulse duration can be chosen to be equal to the total length of the total
electron bunch train (also known as the macro-bunch length) or some integer sub-multiple
of the bunch train length. For 1000 bunches, the laser pulse duration is approximately
87.5 ns. One could artificially create an 87.5 ns interaction with shorter duration
laser pulses by collecting the laser light after the interaction region and recirculating
it to interact with subsequent electron bunches. In practice, the use of high frequency
RF accelerators also results in smaller transverse electron beam size (typically 100
microns in diameter). The size of the electron beam exiting the accelerator is nearly
the focal spot size of the laser in the interaction region. As a result, the required
electron beam focusing in the interaction region is both small and easy to perform.
[0020] The invention provides many advantages in addition to those described above. The
use of 1000x and longer duration laser pulses in the interaction region reduces dramatically
the potential for laser damage on the vacuum windows through which the laser enters
the interaction region, the mirror by which the laser is directed in the interaction
region and the optics by which the laser is focused into the interaction region. Laser
pulses of such long duration enable the use of simpler and less expensive refractive
optics for focusing of the laser pulse in the interaction region. One present embodiment
uses off axis parabolic mirrors for focusing. These longer duration laser pulses dramatically
(1000x reduction) reduce the timing requirements for the laser relative to the electron
bunch. The use of low charge electron bunches enables simpler beam deflection structures
in the accelerator, which helps eliminate dark current electrons and dark current
sources of high energy background photons. These low charge electron bunches reduce
the energy requirements on the photo-gun drive laser that creates the electrons at
the beginning of the accelerator and is compatible with existing, robust fiber laser
technology. The use of long pulse lasers for the interaction laser reduces the complexity
of the interaction laser system by eliminating the need for chirped pulse amplification.
The use of larger interaction spot sizes and longer interaction laser-electron interaction
regions creates a significantly more collimated gamma-ray or x-ray output (10 micro-radians
or less for the narrowest bandwidth). The collimated output of this geometry is readily
compatible with gamma-ray and x-ray lens technology as well as with narrowband gamma-ray
spectrometer technology. Gamma-rays produced by this geometry can have a fractional
bandwidth of 10E-3 or less. The use of this invention with lower energy accelerators,
e.g., 40 MeV machines, allows the production of extremely high flux, tunable x-ray
radiation.
[0021] The foregoing description of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration
and description and is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to
the precise form disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in light
of the above teaching. The embodiments disclosed were meant only to explain the principles
of the invention and its practical application to thereby enable others skilled in
the art to best use the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications
suited to the particular use contemplated. The scope of the invention is to be defined
by the following claims.
1. An x-ray or gamma-ray source having:
- an electron source (10) configured in operation to generate a train of spaced electron
bunches (118);
- an RF linear accelerator (12) adapted to accelerate said electron bunches (118),
which are directed along a path into a laser-electron beam interaction region; and
- a laser system (30) adapted to produce a laser pulse (110), the laser system is
arranged so that the laser pulse is reflected into said path of the oncoming electron
bunches to interact with the electron bunches, so that the laser-electron beam interaction
region extends along said path,
characterized in that:
the transit time of each of the accelerated electron bunches through the laser-electron
beam interaction region is both greater than the duration of the accelerated electron
bunch and greater than the spacing between electron bunches;
the laser system adapted to produce a laser pulse having a duration at least as long
as a transit time of the laser pulse through the laser-electron beam interaction region,
wherein the duration of the laser pulse is either:
equal to the total length of the train of spaced electron bunches so that a single
pass of the laser pulse through the laser-electron beam interaction region interacts
with all of the accelerated electron bunches of the train; or
some integer sub-multiple of the length of the train of the spaced electron bunches,
and the laser system is arranged to recirculate the laser pulse through the laser-electron
beam interaction region for a predetermined number of passes equal to an inverse of
the sub-multiple;
and thereby produce high flux beams of bright, tunable, polarized quasi-monoenergetic
x-rays or gamma-rays via laser-Compton scattering.
2. The x-ray or gamma-ray source of claim 1, wherein the spacing frequency of the electron
bunches (118) is the same as or correlated to the RF frequency of the RF linear accelerator
so that an electron bunch is present for every cycle of said RF frequency.
3. The x-ray or gamma-ray source of claim 1, wherein said RF linear accelerator (12)
is operated in the x-band.
4. The x-ray or gamma-ray source of claim 1, wherein said accelerator (12) is operated
nominally at about 12 GHz.
5. The x-ray or gamma-ray source of claim 1, wherein said accelerator (12) is operated
nominally at about 11.424 GHz.
6. The x-ray or gamma-ray source of claim 1, wherein said gamma-rays comprise a fractional
bandwidth of 10E-3 or less.
7. The x-ray or gamma-ray source of claim 1, wherein said electron source comprises a
photo-gun.
8. The x-ray or gamma-ray source of claim 7, wherein said photo-gun is driven by a laser
that operates at the RF frequency of the RF linear accelerator.
9. A method for producing high flux beams of bright, tunable, polarized quasi-monoenergetic
x-rays or gamma-rays via laser-Compton scattering through the use of an electron source
(10), an RF linear accelerator (12) and a laser system (30), the method
characterized by:
- generating, with the electron source, a train of spaced electron bunches (118);
- accelerating, with the RF accelerator (12), said electron bunches, which are directed
along a path into a laser-electron beam interaction region; and
- producing, with the laser system (30), a laser pulse (110), the laser system is
arranged so that the laser pulse is reflected into said path of the oncoming electron
bunches to interact with the electron bunches, so that the laser-electron beam interaction
region extends along said path,
characterized in that:
the transit time of each of the accelerated electron bunches through the laser-electron
beam interaction region is both greater than the duration of the accelerated electron
bunch and greater than the spacing between electron bunches;
the laser system adapted to produce a laser pulse having a duration at least as long
as a transit time of the laser pulse through the laser-electron beam interaction region,
wherein the duration of the laser pulse is either:
equal to the total length of the train of spaced electron bunches so that a single
pass of the laser pulse through the laser-electron beam interaction region interacts
with all of the accelerated electron bunches of the train; or
some integer sub-multiple of the length of the train of the spaced electron bunches,
and the laser system is arranged to recirculate the laser pulse through the laser-electron
beam interaction region for a predetermined number of passes equal to an inverse of
the sub-multiple;
and thereby produce high flux beams of bright, tunable, polarized quasi-monoenergetic
x-ray or gamma-rays via laser-Compton scattering.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the spacing frequency of the electron bunches (118)
is the same as or correlated to the RF frequency of the RF linear accelerator so that
an electron bunch is present for every cycle of said RF frequency.
11. The method of claim 9, wherein said RF linear accelerator (12) is operated in the
x-band.
1. Röntgen- oder Gammastrahlenquelle, umfassend:
- eine Elektronenquelle (10), die im Betrieb konfiguriert ist, um eine Folge von beabstandeten
Elektronenpaketen (118) zu erzeugen;
- einen HF-Linearbeschleuniger (12), der ausgestaltet ist, um die Elektronenpakete
(118) zu beschleunigen, die entlang eines Pfades in eine Laser-Elektronenstrahl-Interaktionsregion
geleitet werden; und
- ein Lasersystem (30), das ausgestaltet ist, um einen Laserimpuls (110) zu erzeugen,
wobei das Lasersystem so ausgestaltet ist, dass der Laserimpuls in den Pfad der ankommenden
Elektronenpakete reflektiert wird, um mit den Elektronenpaketen zu interagieren, so
dass sich die Laser-Elektronenstrahl-Interaktionsregion entlang des Pfades erstreckt,
dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass:
die Transitzeit von jedem der beschleunigten Elektronenpakete durch die Laser-Elektronenstrahl-Interaktionsregion
sowohl größer als die Dauer des beschleunigten Elektronenpakets als auch größer als
der Abstand zwischen den Elektronenpaketen ist;
das Lasersystem ausgestaltet ist, um einen Laserimpuls mit einer Dauer zu erzeugen,
die mindestens so lang ist wie eine Transitzeit des Laserimpulses durch die Laser-Elektronenstrahl-Interaktionsregion,
wobei die Dauer des Laserimpulses entweder:
gleich der Gesamtlänge der Folge von beabstandeten Elektronenpaketen, so dass ein
einziger Durchgang des Laserimpulses durch die Laser-Elektronenstrahl-Interaktionsregion
mit allen der beschleunigten Elektronenpakete der Folge interagiert; oder
ein ganzzahliges Teilvielfaches der Länge der Folge der beabstandeten Elektronenpakete,
und das Lasersystem ausgestaltet ist, um den Laserimpuls durch die Laser-Elektronenstrahl-Interaktionsregion
für eine vorbestimmte Anzahl von Durchgängen zu rezirkulieren, die gleich einer Inversen
des Teilvielfachen ist;
und dadurch Strahlen mit hohem Fluss von hellen, abstimmbaren, polarisierten, quasi-monoenergetischen
Röntgen- oder Gammastrahlen mittels Laser-Compton-Streuung erzeugt werden.
2. Röntgen- oder Gammastrahlenquelle nach Anspruch 1, wobei die Abstandsfrequenz der
Elektronenpakete (118) gleich der HF-Frequenz des HF-Linearbeschleunigers ist oder
mit dieser korreliert, so dass ein Elektronenpaket für jeden Zyklus der HF-Frequenz
vorhanden ist.
3. Röntgen- oder Gammastrahlenquelle nach Anspruch 1, wobei der HF-Linearbeschleuniger
(12) im X-Band betrieben wird.
4. Röntgen- oder Gammastrahlenquelle nach Anspruch 1, wobei der Beschleuniger (12) nominell
bei etwa 12 GHz betrieben wird.
5. Röntgen- oder Gammastrahlenquelle nach Anspruch 1, wobei der Beschleuniger (12) nominell
bei etwa 11,424 GHz betrieben wird.
6. Röntgen- oder Gammastrahlenquelle nach Anspruch 1, wobei die Gammastrahlen eine Teilbandbreite
von 10E-3 oder weniger haben.
7. Röntgen- oder Gammastrahlenquelle nach Anspruch 1, wobei die Elektronenquelle eine
Photo-Gun umfasst.
8. Röntgen- oder Gammastrahlenquelle nach Anspruch 7, wobei die Photo-Gun von einem Laser
angetrieben wird, der mit der HF-Frequenz des HF-Linearbeschleunigers arbeitet.
9. Verfahren zum Erzeugen von Strahlen mit hohem Fluss von hellen, abstimmbaren, polarisierten,
quasi-monoenergetischen Röntgen- oder Gammastrahlen mittels Laser-Compton-Streuung
durch die Verwendung einer Elektronenquelle (10), eines HF-Linearbeschleunigers (12)
und eines Lasersystems (30), wobei das Verfahren
gekennzeichnet ist durch:
- Erzeugen, mit der Elektronenquelle, einer Folge von beabstandeten Elektronenpaketen
(118);
- Beschleunigen, mit dem HF-Beschleuniger (12), der Elektronenpakete, die entlang
eines Pfades in eine Laser-Elektronenstrahl-Interaktionsregion geleitet werden; und
- Erzeugen, mit dem Lasersystem (30), eines Laserimpulses (110) wobei das Lasersystem
so ausgestaltet ist, dass der Laserimpuls in den Pfad der ankommenden Elektronenpakete
reflektiert wird, um mit den Elektronenpaketen zu interagieren, so dass sich die Laser-Elektronenstrahl-Interaktionsregion
entlang des Pfades erstreckt,
dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass:
die Transitzeit von jedem der beschleunigten Elektronenpakete durch die Laser-Elektronenstrahl-Interaktionsregion sowohl größer als die Dauer des beschleunigten
Elektronenpakets als auch größer als der Abstand zwischen den Elektronenpaketen ist;
das Lasersystem ausgestaltet ist, um einen Laserimpuls mit einer Dauer zu erzeugen,
die mindestens so lang ist wie die Transitzeit des Laserimpulses durch die Laser-Elektronenstrahl-Interaktionsregion,
wobei die Dauer des Laserimpulses entweder:
gleich der Gesamtlänge der Folge von beabstandeten Elektronenpaketen, so dass ein
einziger Durchgang des Laserimpulses durch die Laser-Elektronenstrahl-Interaktionsregion mit allen der beschleunigten Elektronenpakete
der Folge interagiert; oder
ein ganzzahliges Teilvielfaches der Länge der Folge der beabstandeten Elektronenpakete,
und das Lasersystem ausgestaltet ist, um den Laserimpuls durch die Laser-Elektronenstrahl-Interaktionsregion für eine vorbestimmte Anzahl von Durchgängen
zu rezirkulieren, die gleich einer Inversen des Teilvielfachen ist;
und dadurch Strahlen mit hohem Fluss von hellen, abstimmbaren, polarisierten, quasi-monoenergetischen
Röntgen- oder Gammastrahlen mittels Laser-Compton-Streuung erzeugt werden.
10. Verfahren nach Anspruch 9, wobei die Abstandsfrequenz der Elektronenpakete (118) gleich
der HF-Frequenz des HF-Linearbeschleunigers ist oder mit dieser korreliert, so dass
ein Elektronenpaket für jeden Zyklus der HF-Frequenz vorhanden ist.
11. Verfahren nach Anspruch 9, wobei der HF-Linearbeschleuniger (12) im X-Band betrieben
wird.
1. Source de rayons X ou de rayons gamma comportant:
- une source d'électrons (10) configurée pour générer en fonctionnement un train de
paquets d'électrons espacés (118);
- un accélérateur linéaire RF (12) adapté pour accélérer lesdits paquets d'électrons
(118), qui sont dirigés le long d'un chemin dans une région d'interaction laser-faisceau
d'électrons; et
- un système laser (30) adapté pour produire une impulsion laser (110), le système
laser étant agencé de telle manière que l'impulsion laser est réfléchie vers ledit
chemin des paquets d'électrons arrivants pour interagir avec les paquets d'électrons,
de sorte que la région d'interaction laser-faisceau d'électrons s'étend le long dudit
chemin,
caractérisée en ce que:
le temps de transit de chacun des paquets d'électrons accélérés dans la région d'interaction
laser-faisceau d'électrons est à la fois supérieur à la durée du paquet d'électrons
accéléré et supérieur à l'espacement entre les paquets d'électrons;
le système laser est adapté pour produire une impulsion laser ayant une durée au moins
aussi longue qu'un temps de transit de l'impulsion laser dans la région d'interaction
laser-faisceau d'électrons,
dans laquelle la durée de l'impulsion laser est:
soit égale à la longueur totale du train de paquets d'électrons espacés, de sorte
qu'un seul passage de l'impulsion laser dans la région d'interaction laser-faisceau
d'électrons interagit avec tous les paquets d'électrons accélérés du train;
soit un sous-multiple entier de la longueur du train des paquets d'électrons espacés,
et le système laser est agencé pour faire recirculer l'impulsion laser dans la région
d'interaction laser-faisceau d'électrons pour un nombre de passages prédéterminé égal
à un inverse du sous-multiple;
et produit de ce fait des faisceaux à haut flux de rayons X ou de rayons gamma quasi-monoénergétiques
clairs, accordables et polarisés par diffusion Compton laser.
2. Source de rayons X ou de rayons gamma selon la revendication 1, dans laquelle la fréquence
d'espacement des paquets d'électrons (118) est la même que ou est corrélée à la fréquence
RF de l'accélérateur linéaire RF, de sorte qu'un paquet d'électrons est présent pour
chaque cycle de ladite fréquence RF.
3. Source de rayons X ou de rayons gamma selon la revendication 1, dans laquelle ledit
accélérateur linéaire RF (12) est exploité dans la bande X.
4. Source de rayons X ou de rayons gamma selon la revendication 1, dans laquelle ledit
accélérateur (12) est exploité de façon nominale à 12 GHz environ.
5. Source de rayons X ou de rayons gamma selon la revendication 1, dans laquelle ledit
accélérateur (12) est exploité de façon nominale à 11,424 GHz environ.
6. Source de rayons X ou de rayons gamma selon la revendication 1, dans laquelle lesdits
rayons gamma comprennent une largeur de bande fractionnelle de 10E-3 ou moins.
7. Source de rayons X ou de rayons gamma selon la revendication 1, dans laquelle ladite
source d'électrons comprend un photocanon.
8. Source de rayons X ou de rayons gamma selon la revendication 7, dans laquelle ledit
photocanon est piloté par un laser qui fonctionne à la fréquence RF de l'accélérateur
linéaire RF.
9. Procédé de production de faisceaux à haut flux de rayons X ou de rayons gamma quasi-monoénergétiques
clairs, accordables et polarisés par diffusion Compton laser, au moyen d'une source
d'électrons (10), d'un accélérateur linéaire RF (12) et d'un système laser (30), le
procédé étant
caractérisé par les étapes suivantes:
- générer, avec la source d'électrons, un train de paquets d'électrons espacés (118);
- accélérer, avec l'accélérateur RF (12), lesdits paquets d'électrons, qui sont dirigés
le long d'un chemin dans une région d'interaction laser-faisceau d'électrons; et
- produire, avec le système laser (30), une impulsion laser (110), le système laser
étant agencé de telle manière que l'impulsion laser est réfléchie vers ledit chemin
des paquets d'électrons arrivants pour interagir avec les paquets d'électrons, de
sorte que la région d'interaction laser-faisceau d'électrons s'étend le long dudit
chemin,
caractérisé en ce que:
le temps de transit de chacun des paquets d'électrons accélérés dans la région d'interaction
laser-faisceau d'électrons est à la fois supérieur à la durée du paquet d'électrons
accéléré et supérieur à l'espacement entre les paquets d'électrons;
le système laser est adapté pour produire une impulsion laser ayant une durée au moins
aussi longue qu'un temps de transit de l'impulsion laser dans la région d'interaction
laser-faisceau d'électrons,
dans lequel la durée de l'impulsion laser est:
soit égale à la longueur totale du train de paquets d'électrons espacés, de sorte
qu'un seul passage de l'impulsion laser dans la région d'interaction laser-faisceau
d'électrons interagit avec tous les paquets d'électrons accélérés du train;
soit un sous-multiple entier de la longueur du train des paquets d'électrons espacés,
et le système laser est agencé pour faire recirculer l'impulsion laser dans la région
d'interaction laser-faisceau d'électrons pour un nombre de passages prédéterminé égal
à un inverse du sous-multiple;
et produit de ce fait des faisceaux à haut flux de rayons X ou de rayons gamma quasi-monoénergétiques
clairs, accordables et polarisés par diffusion Compton laser.
10. Procédé selon la revendication 9, dans lequel la fréquence d'espacement des paquets
d'électrons (118) est la même que ou est corrélée à la fréquence RF de l'accélérateur
linéaire RF, de sorte qu'un paquet d'électrons est présent pour chaque cycle de ladite
fréquence RF.
11. Procédé selon la revendication 9, dans lequel ledit accélérateur linéaire RF (12)
est exploité dans la bande X.