Title :
Pulse shortening in high power microwave sources
Author :
Benford, J. ; Benford, G.
Author_Institution :
Microwave Sci. Inc., Lafayette, CA, USA
Abstract :
Observations show that the ubiquitous pulse shortening in high power microwave devices arises from formation of plasma, electron streaming, high-E-field breakdown and beam disruption. We review experiments in terms of these causes. Linear beam devices exhibit all these mechanisms; in particular beam disruption by ExB drifts in the strong microwave fields and diffusion in turbulent electric fields in background plasma appears common. In many sources the dominant effect is destruction of the resonance between beam and slow wave structure by cathode plasma motion, possibly from water contamination of the surface. Wall plasma effects shorten pulses in most sources. We call for the introduction of improved surface conditioning, cathodes which do not produce plasmas and increased effort on measurements of the high-field and plasma properties of HPM sources. Because of the broad nature of the phenomena in pulse shortening, we appeal for increased participation in this research by the plasma, intense particle beam and traditional microwave tube communities.
Keywords :
microwave generation; background plasma; beam disruption; cathode plasma motion; cathodes; electron streaming; high power microwave sources; high-E-field breakdown; high-field measurements; linear beam devices; microwave fields; plasma formation; plasma properties; pulse shortening; resonance destruction; slow wave structure; surface conditioning; turbulent electric fields diffusion; wall plasma effects; Cathodes; Electron beams; Microwave devices; Particle beams; Plasma devices; Plasma measurements; Plasma properties; Plasma sources; Plasma waves; Surface contamination;
Conference_Titel :
Pulsed Power Conference, 1997. Digest of Technical Papers. 1997 11th IEEE International
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4213-5
DOI :
10.1109/PPC.1997.679292