A novel scheme for the focusing of high-energy leptons in future linear colliders was proposed in 2001 [P. Raimondi and A. Seryi, Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 3779 (2001)]. This scheme has many advantageous properties over previously studied focusing schemes, including being significantly shorter for a given energy and having a significantly better energy bandwidth. Experimental results from the ATF2 accelerator at KEK are presented that validate the operating principle of such a scheme by demonstrating the demagnification of a 1.3 GeV electron beam down to below 65 nm in height using an energy-scaled version of the compact focusing optics designed for the ILC collider.
We present the response time measurements of a Cs2Te photocathode illuminated
with two 100 fs duration, variable time separation laser pulses at 266 nm
wavelength. The response time was confirmed in dispersive region downstream of
a 12-cell standing wave S-band acceleration structure using a well-known RF
zero-crossing technique. At the same time it was also measured by changing
mechanical path-length difference between two micro-bunches. Both methods agree
that Cs2Te photocathode time response is of the order of 250 fs and thereby it
is possible to generate and control a THz sequence of relativistic electron
bunches by a conventional S-band RF gun. This result further opens a
possibility to construct wide-range tunable THz FEL
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