JACoW logo

Journals of Accelerator Conferences Website (JACoW)

JACoW is a publisher in Geneva, Switzerland that publishes the proceedings of accelerator conferences held around the world by an international collaboration of editors.


BiBTeX citation export for MOPOMS014: Commissioning of a High-Gradient X-Band RF Gun Powered by Short RF Pulses from a Wakefield Accelerator

@inproceedings{tan:ipac2022-mopoms014,
  author       = {W.H. Tan and S.P. Antipov and D.S. Doran and G. Ha and C.-J. Jing and E.W. Knight and S.V. Kuzikov and W. Liu and X. Lu and P. Piot and J.G. Power and J. Shao and C. Whiteford and E.E. Wisniewski},
% author       = {W.H. Tan and S.P. Antipov and D.S. Doran and G. Ha and C.-J. Jing and E.W. Knight and others},
% author       = {W.H. Tan and others},
  title        = {{Commissioning of a High-Gradient X-Band RF Gun Powered by Short RF Pulses from a Wakefield Accelerator}},
  booktitle    = {Proc. IPAC'22},
% booktitle    = {Proc. 13th International Particle Accelerator Conference (IPAC'22)},
  pages        = {652--655},
  eid          = {MOPOMS014},
  language     = {english},
  keywords     = {gun, electron, laser, cathode, MMI},
  venue        = {Bangkok, Thailand},
  series       = {International Particle Accelerator Conference},
  number       = {13},
  publisher    = {JACoW Publishing, Geneva, Switzerland},
  month        = {07},
  year         = {2022},
  issn         = {2673-5490},
  isbn         = {978-3-95450-227-1},
  doi          = {10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2022-MOPOMS014},
  url          = {https://jacow.org/ipac2022/papers/mopoms014.pdf},
  abstract     = {{A high-gradient X-band (11.7-GHz) photoinjector developed by Euclid Techlabs, was recently commissioned at the Argonne Wakefield Accelerator (AWA). The system comprises a 1+1/2-cell RF gun powered by short RF pulses generated as a train of high-charge bunches from the AWA accelerator passes through a slow-wave power extraction and transfer structure. The RF photoinjector was reliably operating with electric fields in excess of 300 MV/m on the photocathode surface free of breakdown and with an insignificant dark-current level. We report on the RF-gun setup, commissioning, and the associated beam generation via photoemission.}},
}