Dh. Dowell et al., LONGITUDINAL PHASE-SPACE EXPERIMENTS ON THE ELSA PHOTOINJECTOR, Nuclear instruments & methods in physics research. Section A, Accelerators, spectrometers, detectors and associated equipment, 375(1-3), 1996, pp. 104-107
The excellent beam quality produced by RF photocathode injectors is we
ll-established, and has been verified by numerous measurements of the
transverse emittance. However, there are few experimental determinatio
ns of the longitudinal phase space. This paper reports on experiments
performed at the ELSA FEL facility to measure the longitudinal phase s
pace distribution at the exit of the 144 MHz photoinjector cavity. Pha
se spaces were determined by the analysis of beam energy spectra and p
ulse shapes at 17.5 MeV for micropulse charges between 0.5 and 5 nC. A
dditional data has been obtained at lower beam charges but with higher
peak current densities at the photocathode. A simple ray tracing mode
l was used to transform the injector phase space through the accelerat
or and around a 180 degrees, three dipole, non-isochronous bend. The p
hase space parameters at the injector exit are varied to fit the data
at 17.5 MeV. The data analysis shows the energy spread of the beam at
the injector exit increases for peak current densities up to 600 A/cm(
2), while the pulse length remains essentially unchanged. The increase
d energy spread is explained by additional acceleration produced by th
e space charge electric field. At 800 to 1400 A/cm(2), the pulse disso
ciates into multiple pulses separated by 40 to 90 ps. The paper argues
the multiple pulses result from a combination of pulse length elongat
ion and the formation of a ''virtual cathode''. This is the first obse
rvation of these effects in an RF photoinjector.