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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Investigation of the Electromagnetic Radiation Emitted by Sub-GeV Electrons in a Bent Crystal.

Victor V. TikhomirovLaura BandieraEnrico BagliHartmut BackeAlessandro BerraM. PrestVincenzo GuidiG. GermogliE. VallazzaD. De SalvadorD. LiettiWerner LauthAndrea Mazzolari

subject

SILICON-CRYSTALSIncoherent scatterGeneral Physics and AstronomyMICROTRON MAMIElectronRadiationMAMI01 natural sciencesElectromagnetic radiationbremsstrahlungNOMAINZPhysics and Astronomy (all)0103 physical sciencescharged particles010306 general physicsRadiant intensityPhysics010308 nuclear & particles physicsScatteringCOHERENT BREMSSTRAHLUNGvolume reflectionSINGLE-CRYSTALcharged particles volume reflection bremsstrahlung performance MAMICHARGED-PARTICLESReflection (physics)Atomic physicsCHARGED-PARTICLES; VOLUME REFLECTION; COHERENT BREMSSTRAHLUNG; SILICON-CRYSTALS; SINGLE-CRYSTAL; MICROTRON MAMI; MAINZIntensity (heat transfer)performance

description

The radiation emitted by 855 MeV electrons via planar channeling and volume reflection in a $30.5\text{\ensuremath{-}}\ensuremath{\mu}\mathrm{m}$-thick bent Si crystal has been investigated at the MAMI (Mainzer Mikrotron) accelerator. The spectral intensity was much more intense than for an equivalent amorphous material, and peaked in the MeV range in the case of channeling radiation. Differently from a straight crystal, also for an incidence angle larger than the Lindhard angle, the spectral intensity remains nearly as high as for channeling. This is due to volume reflection, for which the intensity remains high at a large incidence angle over the whole angular acceptance, which is equal to the bending angle of the crystal. Monte Carlo simulations demonstrated that incoherent scattering significantly influences both the radiation spectrum and intensity, either for channeling or volume reflection. In the latter case, it has been shown that incoherent scattering increases the radiation intensity due to the contribution of volume-captured particles. As a consequence, the experimental spectrum becomes a mixture of channeling and pure volume reflection radiations. These results allow a better understanding of the radiation emitted by electrons subjected to coherent interactions in bent crystals within a still-unexplored energy range, which is relevant for possible applications for innovative and compact x-ray or $\ensuremath{\gamma}$-ray sources.

10.1103/physrevlett.115.025504https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26207480