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Cornell University

CLASSE

CLASSE stands for Cornell Laboratory for Accelerator-based ScienceS and Education

Jared Maxson

Associate Professor

My lab studies high brightness electron beams. We focus on the physics of beam creation and brightness preservation in linear and circular accelerators, for applications ranging from time resolved electron diffraction to high brightness synchrotron radiation sources. In practice, our work combines the use of detailed beam simulations with the design, construction, and operation of accelerator hardware with high resolution beam diagnostics.


Research

A “bright” electron beam is one that is both dense and collimated, and in modern accelerators, brightness is an excellent figure of merit for an electron beam’s usefulness. This is true of both tabletop accelerators like electron microscopes as well as kilometer-scale accelerators like colliders or free electron lasers. While these machines are very different, common threads of brightness-limiting phenomena emerge among them: the brightness of the particle source, the beam’s collective self-interaction and induced nonlinear dynamics. Our group studies these effects in multiple accelerators on Cornell’s campus.

In particular, one significant effort within my group is to grow and characterize high brightness electron photoemitting materials. In any linear accelerator, the beam’s brightness is fundamentally limited by the intrinsic momentum spread of the photoemission which generates the beam. The pursuit of “cold” (low divergence) photoemitters has the potential to dramatically improve the performance of a wide array of future linear accelerators. Our group uses molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) techniques to grow atomically-ordered photoemitting materials like alkali antimonides, and to characterize them in our in-house test accelerators. 

We also seek to deploy high brightness photoemitters in accelerator applications both locally and across the accelerator community. On Cornell's campus, we've developed a new ultrafast electron diffraction device based on our in-house-grown photoemitters that produces high quality diffraction images of materials with sub-picosecond resolution, allowing us to observe atomic motion in atomic-real-time. We collaborate with condensed matter physics groups in this effort. Our team seeks to explore exotic phases in quantum materials that arise transiently on ultrafast timescales, and in particular, phases which are otherwise unavailable in static equilibrium. 

Our group works closely with the Center for Bright Beams, an NSF science and technology center led by Cornell.


Educational Background

B.S., 2009, Lehigh University. PhD, 2015, Cornell University. Postdoctoral Scholar, University of California Los Angeles, 2015-2017. Assistant Professor, Cornell University, 2017-present.