Abstract

A well-known principle for periodical production of high-power ultrashort optical pulses is related to passive mode locking realized when a saturable absorber is incorporated into the laser resonator. A similar effect can be implemented in two-section electronic oscillators comprising an amplifier and a saturable absorber, which should be applicable in the microwave frequency band and suitable for high-power operation. In this paper, we analyze in detail the possibility of realizing a saturable absorber based on cyclotron resonance interaction in the regular waveguide with initially rectilinear electron beam, when saturation is caused by the relativistic dependence of the gyrofrequency on electron energy. Maximum contrast between the absorption of a high-power signal and of a weak signal is achieved in the group synchronism regime when the particle velocity is close to the wave's group velocity. Within the frame of a time-domain self-consistent model, we demonstrate that when such an absorber is installed in the feedback loop of an electron generator powered by existing Ka-band helical-waveguide gyrotron traveling-wave tube, periodical generation of subnanosecond pulses can be provided with peak power up to several hundred kW and sub-GHz repetition frequency. We discuss the influence of deviation from the group synchronism regime on the parameters of generated pulses. Experimental feasibility of the considered scheme is verified based on three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call