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Photonic flatband resonances for free-electron radiation

Yi Yang (), Charles Roques-Carmes (), Steven E. Kooi, Haoning Tang, Justin Beroz, Eric Mazur, Ido Kaminer, John D. Joannopoulos and Marin Soljačić
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Yi Yang: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Charles Roques-Carmes: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Steven E. Kooi: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Haoning Tang: Harvard University
Justin Beroz: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Eric Mazur: Harvard University
Ido Kaminer: Technion-Israel Institute of Technology
John D. Joannopoulos: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Marin Soljačić: Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Nature, 2023, vol. 613, issue 7942, 42-47

Abstract: Abstract Flatbands have become a cornerstone of contemporary condensed-matter physics and photonics. In electronics, flatbands entail comparable energy bandwidth and Coulomb interaction, leading to correlated phenomena such as the fractional quantum Hall effect and recently those in magic-angle systems. In photonics, they enable properties including slow light1 and lasing2. Notably, flatbands support supercollimation—diffractionless wavepacket propagation—in both systems3,4. Despite these intense parallel efforts, flatbands have never been shown to affect the core interaction between free electrons and photons. Their interaction, pivotal for free-electron lasers5, microscopy and spectroscopy6,7, and particle accelerators8,9, is, in fact, limited by a dimensionality mismatch between localized electrons and extended photons. Here we reveal theoretically that photonic flatbands can overcome this mismatch and thus remarkably boost their interaction. We design flatband resonances in a silicon-on-insulator photonic crystal slab to control and enhance the associated free-electron radiation by tuning their trajectory and velocity. We observe signatures of flatband enhancement, recording a two-order increase from the conventional diffraction-enabled Smith–Purcell radiation. The enhancement enables polarization shaping of free-electron radiation and characterization of photonic bands through electron-beam measurements. Our results support the use of flatbands as test beds for strong light–electron interaction, particularly relevant for efficient and compact free-electron light sources and accelerators.

Date: 2023
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DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05387-5

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