This paper presents the results of research, development, and testing of magnetically insulated air diodes with replaceable graphite and stainless-steel tubular and coaxial cathodes of various configurations capable of generating directed bunches of runaway electrons. At the anode, the bunches have cross sections shaped as circles or rings with an outer diameter of 1-2 cm. The durations of the bunches, which carry currents of a few to tens of amperes, range from tens of picoseconds to 100 ps, and their charges range from tenths of a nanocoulomb to a few nanocoulombs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper presents capacitive sensors based on oxide dielectric substrates that provide a high attenuation factor of up to 30 · 10 with a transient time of ∼38 ps. The sensors made it possible to significantly reduce the number of attenuators and increase the bandwidth of the measuring path. The presented sensors have been used successfully for recording high voltage to MV pulses in the time range from a few nanoseconds to tens of picoseconds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTest results of high-voltage one- and four-channel radio-frequency (RF) generators based on the coaxial gyromagnetic ferrite-filled nonlinear transmission lines (NLTL) with external magnetic bias and RF-modulation frequency of a high-voltage pulse envelope of ∼8 GHz are presented. Electrical strength of oil-isolated NLTLs was tested in a compact version of one-channel generator based on the RADAN driver at a repetition rate of 100 pps. In case of a stationary setup, 5-ns pulse with -500 kV amplitude was split into 4 channels with individual NLTLs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor the first time, we demonstrate experimentally the possibility of Cherenkov superradiant generation with a phase imposed by an ultrashort seed microwave pulse. The phases of seed and initiated Ka-band microwave pulses were correlated with the accuracy of 0.5-0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe synchronized operation of four gyromagnetic nonlinear transmission lines (NLTLs) was tested with a pulse repetition frequency up to 1 kHz during 1 s bursts. High voltage pulses with a duration of ∼5 ns from the solid state driver S-500 were split into four 48 Ω channels reaching about -200 kV in each channel with ∼10% variation in the amplitude. The maximum peak voltage at the NLTL output was within 220-235 kV with the maximum modulation depth of decaying oscillations up to 90% at the center frequency near 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTest results of high-voltage subnanosecond pulse generator with a hybrid, two-stage energy compression scheme are presented. After the first compression section with a gas discharger, a ferrite-filled gyromagnetic nonlinear transmitting line is used. The offered technical solution makes it possible to increase the voltage pulse amplitude from -185 kV to -325 kV, with a 2-ns pulse rise time minimized down to ∼180 ps.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe first experiments on the observation of short pulsed superradiant (SR) emission with the excitation of a surface wave by a relativistic electron bunch moving in an oversized corrugated waveguide were performed. Subterahertz SR pulses with a central frequency of 0.14 THz, an ultrashort duration of 150 ps, and an extremely high peak power of 50-70 MW were generated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate both theoretically and experimentally the possibility of correlating the phase of a Cherenkov superradiance (SR) pulse to the sharp edge of a current pulse, when spontaneous emission of the electron bunch edge serves as the seed for SR processes. By division of the driving voltage pulse across several parallel channels equipped with independent cathodes we can synchronize several SR sources to arrange a two-dimensional array. In the experiments carried out, coherent summation of radiation from four independent 8-mm wavelength band SR generators with peak power 600 MW results in the interference maximum of the directional diagram with an intensity that is equivalent to radiation from a single source with a power of 10 GW.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper presents the results of testing a high voltage pulse generator based on parallel gyromagnetic nonlinear transmission lines filled with saturable ferrite. The generator is capable of producing almost identical stable rf-modulated nanosecond high voltage pulses in each of the two, or four, parallel output channels. The output voltage amplitude in each channel can reach -285 or -180 kV, respectively, with a rf modulation depth of up to 60%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe the methods of registration and reconstruction of an envelope of explosive electron emission current from the edge of a cylindrical cathode, which provides a picosecond time reference of the emitted electron beam with a subnanosecond voltage front applied to the accelerating gap. Variation of the front steepness allows one to determine the beam onset time in the experiments, where a collector-type current probe can be used. The advanced method of dynamic time domain reflectometry provides exact data on electron beam current rise and track changes in the cathode emission from pulse to pulse with a precision of less than 10 ps.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe construction and characterization of a measuring module for high voltage time-domain reflectometry with picosecond resolution is presented. The device provides registration of low-distortion reflections from the load at conditions of irregular shape and pronounced instability of an incident probing pulse with amplitude of hundreds of kilovolts and a width/front up to ~2 ns. This is achieved with registration of differential reflecting signals by using two voltage probes, whose original signals are shifted in time and have a calibrated delay.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe generation of an avalanche of runaway electrons is demonstrated for the first time in a laboratory experiment. Two flows of runaway electrons are formed sequentially in an extended air discharge gap at the stage of delay of a pulsed breakdown. The first, picosecond, runaway electron flow is emitted in the cathode region where the field is enhanced.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Phys Plasmas Fluids Relat Interdiscip Topics
September 1999
Experimental results of the observation of coherent stimulated radiation from subnanosecond electron bunches moving through a periodic waveguide and interacting with a backward propagating wave are presented. The subnanosecond microwave pulses in Ka and W bands were generated with repetition frequencies of up to 25 Hz. The mechanism of microwave pulse generation was associated with self-bunching, and the mutual influence of different parts of the electron pulse due to slippage of the wave with respect to the electrons; this can be interpreted as superradiance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrashort pulses of microwave radiation have been produced in a dielectric-lined Cherenkov free-electron maser (FEM) amplifier. An intense initial seed pulse, due to coherent spontaneous emission (CSE), arises at the leading edge of the electron pulse. There is evidence to show that 3-4 cycle spikes are produced through the amplification of these seed pulses.
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