Paper
15 August 2001 Operation of a long-pulse backward-wave oscillator using a disk cathode
Kelly Hahn, Mikhail I. Fuks, Edl Schamiloglu
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Recent work at the University of New Mexico has studied the use of a circular disk cathode as the electron source in a long-pulse Backward Wave Oscillator (BWO) experiment. The use of this cathode was motivated by recent studies by Loza and Strelkov of the General Physics Institute in Russia that demonstrated that a relativistic electron beam with stable cross section could be sustained for over one microsecond. In our first investigations using this new cathode configuration we found that the microwave pulse length generated from a long pulse BWO increased somewhat compared to the case when a traditional annular `cookie-cutter' cathode was used. We attribute this pulse lengthening to the hypothesis that the disk cathode generates a relativistic electron beam that is less likely to radially expand, thereby minimizing wall interception and the generation of unwanted plasma. In this paper we describe details of work- in-progress relating to a comparison of microwave generation from a disk cathode and annular cathode in a long-pulse BWO.
© (2001) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Kelly Hahn, Mikhail I. Fuks, and Edl Schamiloglu "Operation of a long-pulse backward-wave oscillator using a disk cathode", Proc. SPIE 4371, Intense Microwave Pulses VIII, (15 August 2001); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.436932
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KEYWORDS
Plasma

Microwave radiation

Magnetism

Electron beams

Neck

Oscillators

Medium wave

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