Abstract
Abstract
The first electron lenses — understood as “lenses made of
electrons” rather than “lenses to focus electrons” — were
envisioned in the mid-1990s and built in the early 2000s for
compensation of beam-beam effects in the Tevatron proton-antiproton
collider. Since then, the lenses — a novel instrument for
high-energy particle accelerators — have been added to the toolbox
of modern beam facilities, being particularly useful for the energy
frontier superconducting hadron colliders (“supercolliders”). In
this article we briefly present the history of ideas and
developments toward effective use of low-energy high-current bright
electron beams in high energy accelerators and discuss the promise
of their future applications.
Subject
Mathematical Physics,Instrumentation
Cited by
3 articles.
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