All Stories

  1. Cherenkov radiation and cathodoluminescence in sapphire, quartz, and diamond under the excitation of an electron beam
  2. Formation of a Negative Streamer in a Sharply Nonuniform Electric Field and the Time of Generation of Runaway Electrons
  3. Measuring and Modeling Streamer Velocity at an Air Discharge in a Highly Inhomogeneous Electric Field
  4. Cumulation effect of an electron beam generated in a high-voltage nanosecond discharge plasma in vacuum and gas diodes
  5. On the Influence of Electron Energy on Characteristics of the Cherenkov Radiation and Cathodoluminescence
  6. Streamer Breakdown with Runaway Electrons Forming Diffuse Discharges in an Inhomogeneous Electric Field
  7. Cumulation of a High-Current Electron Beam During a Nanosecond High-Voltage Discharge in a Low-Pressure Diode
  8. Experimental Determination of the Generation Moment of Runaway Electrons
  9. Effect of Air Pressure on Parameters of Beam Current and X-Ray Radiation Generated in a Gas Diode
  10. Emission of diamonds, leucosapphire, and KU-1 quartz in the range of 200–800 nm excited by electron beams with a pulse duration of 0.5 and 12 ns
  11. Spectral and amplitude-time characteristics of crystals excited by a runaway electron beam
  12. Features of streamer formation in a sharply non-uniform electric field
  13. Beam-plasma discharge in a dielectric cavity by electron beam injection
  14. E-beam generation in discharges initiated by voltage pulses with a rise time of 200 ns at an air pressure of 12.5–100 kPa
  15. Efficient N2 laser pumped by nanosecond diffuse discharge
  16. Light Emission from Crystals Excited by a 110-ps Pulsed Electron Beam
  17. Streamer Breakdown of Atmospheric-Pressure Air in a Non-Uniform Electric Field at High Overvoltages
  18. Diffuse discharge in mixtures of SF6 with H2, D2 and C2H6 formed by nanosecond voltage pulses in non-uniform electric field
  19. Excitation of Diamonds by a Subnanosecond Runaway Electron Beam with an Electron Energy of Up to 200 keV Generated in a Nanosecond Gas Discharge
  20. Positive streamers in a point-to-plane gap filled with air and nitrogen at low and high voltages
  21. Subnanosecond Breakdown in the Strongly Overvoltaged Gap: Simulation and Experiment
  22. Generation and registration of runaway electron beams during the breakdown of highly overvoltaged gaps filled with dense gases
  23. Displacement current during the formation of positive streamers in atmospheric pressure air with a highly inhomogeneous electric field
  24. Simulation of the Subnanosecond Runaway Electron Source for Low-Dose Industrial Radiography
  25. Streamers at the Subnanosecond Breakdown of Argon and Nitrogen in Nonuniform Electric Field at Both Polarities
  26. Measurement of the Dynamic Displacement Current as a New Method of Study of the Dynamics of Formation of a Streamer at a Breakdown of Gases at a High Pressure
  27. Calculation of energy absorbed in the plasma of high voltage nanosecond discharge with subnanosecond rise-time of voltage impulse
  28. A Compact Setup Based on a Gas Diode for Studying of Cathodoluminescence
  29. Subnanosecond breakdown in high-pressure gases
  30. Ionization Waves During the Subnanosecond Breakdown Initiated by Runaway Electrons in High-Pressure Nitrogen and Air
  31. Formation of ball streamers at a subnanosecond breakdown of gases at a high pressure in a nonuniform electric field
  32. ICCD-imaging of a plasma glow during the prebreakdown stage of nanosecond discharges at both polarities in nitrogen, air, and argon
  33. Luminescence of crystals excited by a runaway electron beam and by excilamp radiation with a peak wavelength of 222 nm
  34. The physical nature of electrons with “anomalous” energies in fast atmospheric discharges
  35. Characteristic radiation of nitrogen under subnanosecond breakdown in a highly nonuniform electric field near the positive-polarity electrode
  36. VUV radiation in the plasma of nanosecond discharges initiated by runaway electrons
  37. Parameters of runaway electron beam generated during excitation by nanosecond voltage pulses in short gaps filled with nitrogen
  38. Review of supershort avalanche electron beam during nanosecond-pulse discharges in some gases
  39. Influence of the interelectrode distance and the gas pressure on parameters of a runaway electron beam generating during the nanosecond breakdown in SF6 and nitrogen
  40. Parameters of the beam plasma formed by a forevacuum plasma source of a ribbon beam in zero-field transportation system
  41. Laser action in the IR, UV and VUV in runaway electron preionized discharges
  42. Generation of runaway electrons and X rays in an inhomogeneous electric field at high gas pressures
  43. Runaway electrons during subnanosecond breakdowns in high-pressure gases
  44. Generation of dual pulses of the runaway electron beam current during the subnanosecond breakdown of atomic and molecular gases
  45. VUV radiation of heteronuclear dimers and its amplification in the plasma of high-voltage nanosecond discharges initiated by runaway electrons in Ar–Xe mixture
  46. Radiative Characteristics of the Pulse-Periodic Discharge Plasma Initiated by Runaway Electrons
  47. Laser monitor visualization of gas-dynamic processes under pulse-periodic discharges initiated by runaway electrons in atmospheric pressure air
  48. Neutrons in a nanosecond low-pressure discharge in deuterium
  49. Theoretical simulation of the picosecond runaway-electron beam in coaxial diode filled with SF6at atmospheric pressure
  50. Amplitude−temporal characteristics of a supershort avalanche electron beam generated during subnanosecond breakdown in air and nitrogen
  51. Colored Diffuse Mini Jets in Runaway Electrons Preionized Diffuse Discharges
  52. Supershort avalanche electron beam inSF6and krypton
  53. Influence of field ionization on the efficiency of neutron generation
  54. Spectral and amplitude–time characteristics of radiation of plasma of a repetitively pulsed discharge initiated by runaway electrons
  55. Laser action in runaway electron pre-ionized diffuse discharges
  56. Parameters of REP DD's plasma formed during the pulse and pulse-periodic modes in dense gases
  57. Excilamps and their Applications.
  58. Blue and green jets in laboratory discharges initiated by runaway electrons
  59. The optical emission spectroscopy of pulsed and pulse- periodic discharges initiated with runaway electrons
  60. Inverted Polarity Effect at the Subnanosecond High-Voltage Breakdown of Air
  61. Analogue of bead lightning in a pulse discharge initiated by runaway electrons in atmospheric pressure air
  62. Dynamics of ionization processes in high-pressure nitrogen, air, and SF6 during a subnanosecond breakdown initiated by runaway electrons
  63. On the parameters of runaway electron beams and on electrons with an “anomalous” energy at a subnanosecond breakdown of gases at atmospheric pressure
  64. On the nature of radiation of blue and green jets in laboratory discharges initiated by runaway electrons
  65. Breakdown features of a high-voltage nanosecond discharge initiated with runaway electrons at subnanosecond voltage pulse rise time
  66. Effect of gas heating on the generation of an ultrashort avalanche electron beam in the pulse-periodic regime
  67. Gas lasers pumped by runaway electrons preionized diffuse discharge
  68. Repetitively pulsed UV radiation source based on a run-away electron preionised diffuse discharge in nitrogen
  69. Generation of neutrons in a nanosecond low-pressure discharge in deuterium
  70. Bent paths of a positive streamer and a cathode-directed spark leader in diffuse discharges preionized by runaway electrons
  71. Efficient gas lasers pumped by run-away electron preionized diffuse discharge
  72. Spots on electrodes and images of a gap during pulsed discharges in an inhomogeneous electric field at elevated pressures of air, nitrogen and argon
  73. Electrode material splashing during a high-voltage nanosecond discharge in low pressure deuterium, hydrogen, helium, and argon
  74. Anode and Cathode Spots in High-Voltage Nanosecond-Pulse Discharge Initiated by Runaway Electrons in Air
  75. Determination of the electron concentration and temperature, as well as the reduced electric field strength, in the plasma of a high-voltage nanosecond discharge initiated in atmospheric-pressure nitrogen by a runaway electron beam
  76. Initial stage of breakdown of a point-plane gap filled with high-pressure nitrogen and SF6
  77. Spectral parameters of nonchain volume-discharge HF(DF) laser radiation
  78. Abnormal polarity effect in nanosecond-pulse breakdown of SF6 and nitrogen
  79. Generation of super-short avalanche electron beams in SF6
  80. Inflections of spark leaders in elevated-pressure nanosecond gas discharges
  81. UV, visible, and IR lasers pumped by the diffuse discharge formed by run-away electrons
  82. Dynamic displacement current in subnanosecond breakdowns in an inhomogeneous electric field
  83. Nanosecond discharges with runaway electrons and X-rays in atmospheric pressure air, nitrogen, CH4, SF6, xenon, krypton, argon and helium
  84. Transition of a diffuse discharge to a spark at nanosecond breakdown of high-pressure nitrogen and air in a nonuniform electric field
  85. Lasing in the UV, IR and visible spectral ranges in a runaway-electron-preionised diffuse dischrage
  86. Application of dynamic displacement current for diagnostics of subnanosecond breakdowns in an inhomogeneous electric field
  87. Time behaviour of discharge current in case of nanosecond-pulse surface dielectric barrier discharge
  88. Two-component structure of the current pulse of a ranaway electron beam generated during electric breakdown of elevated-pressure nitrogen
  89. Change of the e-beam generation mode at transition from the vacuum to the gas-filled diode
  90. Excilamps based on inert gases and their mixtures, excited by a volume discharge induced by a beam of runaway electrons
  91. Excilamps based on xenon dimers excited by a barrier discharge
  92. Vacuum-ultraviolet excilamps with excitation by a barrier corona discharge
  93. Note: Measurement of extreme-short current pulse duration of runaway electron beam in atmospheric pressure air
  94. Spark discharge formation in an inhomogeneous electric field under conditions of runaway electron generation
  95. Emission of cyan upon excitation of nitrogen, air, and N2-CH4 mixture by discharge pulses in an inhomogeneous electric field
  96. Excilamps and their applications
  97. Neutron emission during a nanosecond discharge in deuterium in a nonuniform electric field
  98. Lasing from the domain of collision of ionisation waves produced due to electric field concentration at electrodes with a small radius of curvature
  99. High-Pressure Diffuse and Spark Discharge in Nitrogen and Air in a Spatially Nonuniform Electric Field of High Intensity
  100. Neutron generation during pulsed discharge in deuterium
  101. Generation of a supershort avalanche electron beam in a subnanosecond breakdown in different gases at pressures from 1 torr to 15 atm
  102. The neutrons emission during the nanosecond discharge in deuterium with inhomogeneous electric field distribution
  103. Formation of superpower volume discharges and their applications
  104. UV and VUV Excilamps with High Peak Power
  105. Estimation of the efficiency of the hybrid LIDAR-DOAS system of lidar sensing of the polluted atmosphere using pulsed excilamps
  106. Modes of Generation of Runaway Electron Beams in He, $ \hbox{H}_{2}$, Ne, and $\hbox{N}_{2}$ at a Pressure of 1–760 Torr
  107. Runaway electrons preionized diffuse discharges at high pressure
  108. Carbon monoxide emission in VUV spectral region upon excitation of natural gas by a capacitive discharge
  109. On the initiation of a spark discharge upon the breakdown of nitrogen and air in a nonuniform electric field
  110. Emission in argon and krypton at 147 nm excited by runaway-electron-induced diffusion discharge
  111. Modes of generation of runaway electron beams in gases at a pressure of 1–760 Torr
  112. Effective regimes of runaway electron beam generation in helium, hydrogen, and nitrogen
  113. Supershort Avalanche Electron Beams and X-rays in Atmospheric-Pressure Air
  114. High-pressure runaway-electron-preionized diffuse discharges in a nonuniform electric field
  115. 10.1007/s11454-008-1017-2
  116. 10.1007/s11454-008-2015-0
  117. Generation of subnanosecond electron beams in air at atmospheric pressure
  118. Potential of pulsed excilamps for remote sounding of polluted atmosphere
  119. High Power UV and VUV Excilamps and Their Applications
  120. Optical Properties of Runaway Electron Preionized Diffuse Discharges and Their Applications for Excilamps and Lasers
  121. Runaway-electron-preionized diffuse discharge at atmospheric pressure and its application
  122. Radiative characteristics of nitrogen upon excitation by volume discharge initiated by runaway electron beam
  123. High power VUV and UV excilamps
  124. Generation of subnanosecond electron beams in atmospheric pressure air
  125. Runaway electrons preionized diffuse discharges at high pressure
  126. Supershort Avalanche Electron Beams in Discharges in Air and Other Gases at High Pressure
  127. Energy distribution of runaway electrons generated by a nanosecond disharge in atmospheric-pressure air
  128. High power UV and VUV pulsed excilamp
  129. Runaway electrons preionized diffuse discharges at atmospheric pressure
  130. Supershort avalanche electron beams in air and other gases at high pressure
  131. A coaxial chopping gap filled with air at atmospheric pressure with a pulse decay time ≤100 ps
  132. Large-aperture excilamps for microelectronic applications
  133. Spectra of electrons and X-ray photons in a diffusive nanosecond discharge in air under atmospheric pressure
  134. Effect of gas pressure on amplitude and duration of electron beam current in a gas-filled diode
  135. Energy distribution of runaway electrons generated by a nanosecond discharge in atmospheric-pressure air
  136. Generation of supershort avalanche electron beams and formation of diffuse discharges in different gases at high pressure
  137. Supershort avalanche electron beam generation in gases
  138. Supershort avalanche electron beams and x-ray in high-pressure nanosecond discharges
  139. Electron flux spatial distribution in an ultrashort avalanche electron beam generated at atmospheric air pressure
  140. Pumping of lasers and lamps by discharges based on the background-electron multiplication waves
  141. Effect of a transverse magnetic field on the generation of electron beams in the gas-filled diode
  142. Nanosecond discharge in sulfur hexafluoride and the generation of an ultrashort avalanche electron beam
  143. The nature of emitting microdischarges in barrier-discharge lamps
  144. High pulse radiating power excilamps
  145. Pulsed UV and VUV excilamps
  146. Generation and measurement of subnanosecond electron beams in gas-filled diodes
  147. One- and two-barrier excilamps on xenon dimers operating in the VUV range
  148. Generation of runaway electron subnanosecond pulses in nitrogen and helium at a voltage of 25 kV across the gap
  149. Diffuse nanosecond discharges at elevated pressures in nonuniform electric fields
  150. A collector assembly for measuring a subnanosecond-duration electron beam current
  151. Discharge current and current of supershort avalanche E-beam at volume nanosecond discharge in non-uniform electric field
  152. Sources of spontaneous narrow-band UV and VUV radiation
  153. Detection of short X-ray pulses excited by an atmospheric-pressure discharge of nanosecond duration in air
  154. Generation regimes for the runaway-electron beam in gas
  155. On the generation of supershort avalanche electron beams and x radiation during nanosecond discharges in dense gases (results and discussion)
  156. On the formation of a barrier discharge in excilamps
  157. Effective emission of Xe2* and Kr2* excited by a pulsed corona discharge bounded by a dielectric barrier
  158. High-power short-pulse xenon dimer spontaneous radiation source
  159. Discharge current and current of supershort avalanche E-beam at volume nanosecond discharge in non-uniform electric field
  160. Generation of powerful sub-nanosecond e-beams and x-rays in gas discharges under atmospheric pressure
  161. Spectral characteristics of a high-current pulsed discharge in xenon
  162. Supershort avalanche electron beam generation in N2 and He at quasi-continuous gap voltage
  163. Ultrashort electron beams generated on the flat part of a voltage pulse in nitrogen and helium
  164. Electron beam generation in nitrogen and helium at a low voltage on a gas diode
  165. Excess-energy electrons in a nanosecond electron beam from a vacuum diode
  166. Discharge current and ultrashort avalanche electron beam current in a volume nanosecond gas discharge in inhomogeneous electric field
  167. Possible application of a volume avalanche discharge initiated by an electron beam for designing a krypton dimer laser
  168. High-current-density subnanosecond electron beams formed in a gas-filled diode at low pressures
  169. Afterglow emission from xenon, krypton, and argon dimers in nanosecond volume discharge at elevated pressures
  170. Capacitive and barrier discharge excilamps and their applications (Review)
  171. A windowless VUV excilamp
  172. Study of emission of a volume nanosecond discharge plasma in xenon, krypton and argon at high pressures
  173. A high-power xenon dimer excilamp
  174. Effective emission of Xe2* and Kr2* excited by pulsed corona discharge b...
  175. Free-expanding and bounded discharge in Xe flashlamp
  176. UV flashlamp source for high-voltage high-current diamond switches
  177. Calculation of absolute values of the spectral energy density of polychromatic radiation
  178. Powerful source of spontaneous radiation in the spectral range 200-350 nm pumped by unidirectional current pulse
  179. A photoreactor on the basis of a Xe2 excilamp
  180. High-power spontaneous UV radiation source and its excitation regimes
  181. High-power source of 200–350 nm spontaneous emission excited by unipolar current pulses
  182. UV and VUV light sources on R2* and RX* molecules
  183. Emission characteristics of a pulsed discharge in xenon
  184. Formation of coniform microdischarges in KrCl and XeCl excimer lamps
  185. Modeling of barrier filaments as miniglow discharge: Xe2 (172 nm) and XeCl (308 nm) excilamps
  186. Spontaneous UV source based on pulsed discharge in Xe (Kr, Ar)
  187. Discharge-pumped radiation of xenon dimers
  188. Spontaneous UV radiation source based on pulsed discharge in xenon
  189. Excilamps: efficient sources of spontaneous UV and VUV radiation
  190. High-power UV excilamps excited by a glow discharge
  191. Excilamps: efficient sources of spontaneous UV and VUV radiation
  192. KrCl and XeCl exciplex glow discharge lamps with an output power of ∼1.5 kW
  193. High-power excilamps pumped by a barrier discharge
  194. Xe(He,Kr)-I 2 (Cl 2 ) glow, barrier and capacitive discharge excilamps
  195. Discharge and radiation characteristics of Xe one-barrier excilamps
  196. Power and energy input determination for barrier discharge excilamps
  197. Xe(He)-I 2 glow and capacitive discharge excilamps
  198. Influence of excitation pulse form on barrier discharge excilamp efficiency
  199. An effective high-power KrCl excimer barrier-discharge lamp
  200. A 1-kW/cm2 flash KrCl excimer lamp
  201. Capacitive-discharge KrCl excilamps with short radiation pulsewidth
  202. Capacitive discharge excilamps with short duration of radiation pulse
  203. Capacitive discharge excilamps
  204. High-power spontaneous ultraviolet sources
  205. Pulsed lasers operating by the atomic transitions of inert gases on pumping by a self-sustained transverse discharge
  206. Broadband radiation in Ne pumped by e-beam and electrical discharge
  207. High-power excilamps with short-pulse duration
  208. 10.1007/s10786-008-2010-8
  209. UV and VUV excilamps excited by glow, barrier and capacitive discharges
  210. Sealed efficient excilamps excited by a capacitive discharge
  211. UV and VUV efficient excilamps
  212. Efficient pumping of discharge gas lasers by generators with inductive energy storage
  213. Glow-and-barrier-discharge efficient excilamps
  214. Application of KrCI excilamp for cleaning GaAs surfaces using atomic hydrogen
  215. Efficient nonchain chemical HF lasers initiated by e-beam and self-sustained discharge
  216. Cylindrical glow-discharge-pumped excimer lamps
  217. HF laser pumped by a generator with an inductive energy storage unit
  218. Coaxial, cylindrical, and planar UV excilamps pumped by glow or barrier discharge
  219. High-power coherent and incoherent UV and VUV sources
  220. High-average-power exciplex flashlamps
  221. Versatile pulsed FOTON, LIDA-D and LIDA-M model lasers
  222. N2laser pumped by a generator with inductive energy storage and a semiconductor current breaker
  223. 'Foton' series of universal pulsed lasers
  224. Pulsed chemical electric-discharge SF6—H2laser
  225. Radially convergent 30–100-μs e-beam-pumped Xe and Ne lasers
  226. Electron-beam-pumped broad-aperture lasers
  227. High-power narrow-band dye laser pumped by a XeCl Joule exciplex laser