Synchrotron radiation
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- This article concerns the physical phenomenon of synchrotron radiation. For details on the production of this radiation in laboratories, see synchrotron. For applications, see synchrotron light.
Synchrotron radiation from storage rings
Synchrotron radiation is characterized by:
- High brightness and high intensity, many orders of magnitude more than with X-rays produced in conventional X-ray tubes
- High brilliance, exceeding other natural and artificial light sources by many orders of magnitude: 3rd generation sources typically have a brilliance larger than 1018 photons/s/mm2/mrad2/0.1%BW, where 0.1%BW denotes a bandwidth 10-3w centered around the frequency w.
- High collimation, i.e. small angular divergence of the beam
- Low emittance, i.e. the product of source cross section and solid angle of emission is small
- Widely tunable in energy/wavelength by monochromatization (sub eV to tens of keV)
- High level of polarization (linear or elliptical)
- Pulsed light emission (pulse durations at or below one nanosecond, or a billionth of a second);
The advantages of using synchrotron radiation for spectroscopy and diffraction have been realized by an ever-growing scientific community, beginning in the 1960s and 1970s. In the beginning, storage rings were built for particle physics and synchrotron radiation was used in "parasitic mode" when bending magnet radiation had to be extracted by drilling extra holes.
As the application of synchrotron radiation became more intense and promising, devices that enhanced the intensity of synchrotron radiation were built into existing rings. Third-generation synchrotron radiation sources were conceived and optimized from the outset to produce bright X-rays.
Nowadays, fourth-generation sources that will include different concepts for producing ultrabright, pulsed time-structured X-rays for extremely demanding and also probably yet-to-be-conceived experiments are under consideration.
As mentioned above, bending electromagnets are usually used to generate the radiation, but to generate stronger radiation, another kind of device, called an insertion device, is sometimes employed. Current third-generation synchrotron radiation sources are typically heavily based upon these insertion devices, when straight sections in the storage ring are used for inserting periodic magnetic structures (composed of many magnets that have a special repeating row of N and S poles) that force the electrons into a sinusoidal path or helical path. Thus, instead of a single bend, many tens or hundreds of "wiggles" at precisely calculated positions add up or multiply the total intensity that is seen at the end of the straight section. Thus these devices are called wigglers or undulators. The main difference between an undulator and a wiggler is the intensity of their magnetic field and the amplitude of the deviation from the straight line path of the electrons.
There are openings in the storage ring to let the radiation exit and follow a beam line into the experimenters' vacuum chamber. A great number of such beamlines can emerge from modern third-generation synchrotron radiation sources.
Synchrotron radiation is used in particle accelerators in radiation damping, a method of reducing beam emittance.
Synchrotron radiation in astronomy
Synchrotron radiation is also generated by astronomical structures and motions, typically where relativistic electrons spiral (and hence change velocity) through magnetic fields. It was first detected, in a jet emitted by M87, in 1956 by Geoffrey R. Burbidge Burbidge, G. R. "[On Synchrotron Radiation from Messier 87.] Astrophysical Journal, vol. 124, p.416", who saw it as confirmation of a prediction by Iosif S. Shklovskii in 1953, but it had been predicted several years earlier by Hannes Alfvén and Nicolai Herlofson Alfvén, H.; Herlofson, N. "[Cosmic Radiation and Radio Stars]" Physical Review, vol. 78, Issue 5, pp. 616-616 in 1950.
Supermassive black holes have been suggested for producing synchrotron radiation, by gravitationally accelerating ions through magnetic fields.
Footnotes
See also
- Synchrotron for this type of particle accelerator
- Synchrotron light for applications of synchrotron radiation
External links
- [Synchotron radiation]
- [Cosmic Magnetobremsstrahlung (synchrotron Radiation)], by Ginzburg, V. L., Syrovatskii, S. I., ARAA, 1965
- [Developments in the Theory of Synchrotron Radiation and its Reabsorption], by Ginzburg, V. L., Syrovatskii, S. I., ARAA, 1969
- [Lightsources.org]
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