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United KingdomScience2 days ago

Diamond-based particle detector captures one-picosecond electron bursts for high-rate beam diagnostics

Physicists from UC Santa Cruz and other institutions in California and New Mexico have developed a new diamond-based particle detection system designed to improve diagnostics for next-generation particle accelerators. This system allows accelerators to process up to 1 million pulses per second, significantly increasing their capacity compared to previous capabilities. The development was a collaborative effort involving multiple universities and national laboratories.

Micrograph of the assembled detection system, including the compact signal path and FPS readout ASIC, on its carrier PC board. Credit: Physical Review Accelerators and Beams (2026). DOI: 10.1103/m79w-ft8t

Physicists at UC Santa Cruz and other institutes across California and New Mexico have developed a detection system that will allow next-generation particle accelerators to better reveal fundamental biological and chemical processes, as well as advance critical areas such as materials science and energy research.

The Advanced Accelerator Diagnostics Collaboration, a group of two University of California campuses and three U.S. national laboratories, came together to solve a growing need for high-rate beam diagnostics. These accelerators will now jump from 120 pulses a second to 1 million pulses a second, straining current beam diagnostic systems. The results are now published in the journal Physical Review Accelerators and Beams .

"It really highlights the power of collaboration between universities and national laboratories," said Bruce Schumm, the Long Family Professor of Experimental Physics. "If you took away Lawrence Berkeley Lab, if you took away Los Alamos, if you took away UC Davis, any of those, the whole thing would have fallen apart."

The fruits of this yearslong collaboration are nothing less than the best-performing high-bandwidth particle detection system built to date. The system combines artificial diamonds , custom microchips and cutting-edge assembly techniques into a compact detector designed for measuring the properties of the beams shot by advanced accelerators like the Linac Coherent Light Source II at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in Menlo Park.

The detection system along with associated hardware for electronic conditioning and control . Credit: Carolyn Lagattuta

Need for speed

As next-generation particle accelerators continue to develop, they will have faster and faster bursts of charged particles that are closer to each other in time. This means the researchers using them will need to create new, faster ways to measure these beams and control their properties.

"Nobody was building things that can measure, diagnose the beams and help control the accelerator, and also help the experimenters to unravel the data," said Schumm.

At these high rates of beam repetition—eventually reaching beyond 1 billion times per second—existing detection systems fail. To overcome that barrier, the Advanced Accelerator Diagnostics Collaboration set out to redesign the entire detection chain, from the sensor material itself to the electronics used to read out the signal.

"It required developing a new approach to processing the signal, and also a new integrated circuit chip that we designed ourselves and then characterized," said Schumm. "This is the first time we put it all together and put it into a beam."

The detector's first full accelerator test took place last July at SLAC, where researchers exposed their system to bursts of electrons lasting 1 picosecond.

The team collected thousands of beam pulses under varying operating conditions and found that the detector consistently produced clean, sharply defined signals about one-eighth of a nanosecond long across a wide dynamic range.

"It performed extremely well, better than we expected," said Schumm. "And not only that, but if we compare the performance to our pure calculation expectations, they agree with stunning accuracy."

Looking ahead

The core detection system. The black square to the left of center is the diamond sensor.

These first tests are just the beginning, with the second version of the detection system currently in testing and development for fall 2026. These tests will use a new version of the integrated circuit chip that has been specifically designed to read out the tiny diamond sensor and is expected to provide an even faster signal response than the version tested last summer.

In the near future, the team also hopes to make the detector easier for nonspecialist laboratories to use and to operate as a "plug-and-play" diagnostic system. Beyond next-generation accelerators, this new system could also potentially be applicable in high-energy physics, advanced laser-control systems and fusion-energy development.

"The more and more that we look at things, the more and more we need to understand things at the atomic scale," said Schumm. "We need to understand how things evolve—how things change over very, very fast time scales."

More information

Mohammadreza Mohseni Ferezghi et al, First results from a high-frame-rate, multi-GHz ionizing particle detection system geared toward accelerator diagnostic applications, Physical Review Accelerators and Beams (2026). DOI: 10.1103/m79w-ft8t

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Source document: Physical Review Accelerators and Beams

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Phys.orgIndependentCenter2 days ago
Diamond-based particle detector captures one-picosecond electron bursts for high-rate beam diagnostics

Physicists from UC Santa Cruz and other institutions in California and New Mexico have developed a new diamond-based particle detection system designed to improve diagnostics for next-generation particle accelerators. This system allows accelerators to process up to 1 million pulses per second, significantly increasing their capacity compared to previous capabilities. The development was a collaborative effort involving multiple universities and national laboratories.

Bias read (Center): The article discusses a scientific advancement with no political implications. It focuses on technical details of a physics project without taking a stance or showing bias toward any political ideology.

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