
thumb|Cs-K-Sb photocathode centered on a Molybdenum plug (a) after growth in the preparation chamber and (b) after transfer into the photoinjector
thumb|Cs-K-Sb photocathode centered on a Molybdenum plug (a) after growth in the preparation chamber and (b) after transfer into the photoinjector
A photocathode is a surface engineered to convert light (photons) into electrons using the photoelectric effect. Photocathodes are important in accelerator physics where they are utilised in a photoinjector to generate high brightness electron beams. Electron beams generated with photocathodes are commonly used for free electron lasers and for ultrafast electron diffraction. Photocathodes are also commonly used as the negatively charged electrode in a light detection device such as a photomultiplier, phototube and image intensifier.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).