Ultrahigh-spectral-brightness Excimer Lasers as Pump Sources for Coherent Soft X-ray Generation

1981 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Egger ◽  
H. Pummer ◽  
T. Srinivasan ◽  
C. K. Rhodes
IUCrJ ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 230-245 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edgar Weckert

Structural studies in general, and crystallography in particular, have benefited and still do benefit dramatically from the use of synchrotron radiation. Low-emittance storage rings of the third generation provide focused beams down to the micrometre range that are sufficiently intense for the investigation of weakly scattering crystals down to the size of several micrometres. Even though the coherent fraction of these sources is below 1%, a number of new imaging techniques have been developed to exploit the partially coherent radiation. However, many techniques in nanoscience are limited by this rather small coherent fraction. On the one hand, this restriction limits the ability to study the structure and dynamics of non-crystalline materials by methods that depend on the coherence properties of the beam, like coherent diffractive imaging and X-ray correlation spectroscopy. On the other hand, the flux in an ultra-small diffraction-limited focus is limited as well for the same reason. Meanwhile, new storage rings with more advanced lattice designs are under construction or under consideration, which will have significantly smaller emittances. These sources are targeted towards the diffraction limit in the X-ray regime and will provide roughly one to two orders of magnitude higher spectral brightness and coherence. They will be especially suited to experiments exploiting the coherence properties of the beams and to ultra-small focal spot sizes in the regime of several nanometres. Although the length of individual X-ray pulses at a storage-ring source is of the order of 100 ps, which is sufficiently short to track structural changes of larger groups, faster processes as they occur during vision or photosynthesis, for example, are not accessible in all details under these conditions. Linear accelerator (linac) driven free-electron laser (FEL) sources with extremely short and intense pulses of very high coherence circumvent some of the limitations of present-day storage-ring sources. It has been demonstrated that their individual pulses are short enough to outrun radiation damage for single-pulse exposures. These ultra-short pulses also enable time-resolved studies 1000 times faster than at standard storage-ring sources. Developments are ongoing at various places for a totally new type of X-ray source combining a linac with a storage ring. These energy-recovery linacs promise to provide pulses almost as short as a FEL, with brilliances and multi-user capabilities comparable with a diffraction-limited storage ring. Altogether, these new X-ray source developments will provide smaller and more intense X-ray beams with a considerably higher coherent fraction, enabling a broad spectrum of new techniques for studying the structure of crystalline and non-crystalline states of matter at atomic length scales. In addition, the short X-ray pulses of FELs will enable the study of fast atomic dynamics and non-equilibrium states of matter.


1983 ◽  
Vol 3 (1-6) ◽  
pp. 307-310
Author(s):  
K. Hohla ◽  
W. Mückenheim ◽  
D. Basting

Excimer lasers are powerful sources of radiation in the UV, providing several laser lines between 157 and 353 nm. The excimer laser transition is bound-free, and thus the emitted wavelengths are broad-band (up to 200 cm−1). In addition the high gain (0.15 cm−1) of the laser gas causes a rather large divergence (>1 mrad) in conventional excimer lasers.A new excimer laser concept is described which improves the spectral brightness in terms of watt/(rad × bandwidth) by three orders of magnitude. This allows, through non-linear processes such as Raman shifting the fundamental output and four-wave-mixing in gases, the generation of new laser lines in the UV and VUV.


1983 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Mückenheim ◽  
K. Hohla ◽  
E. Albers ◽  
H. v. Bergmann ◽  
D. Basting ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 03 (01) ◽  
pp. 13-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jochen R. Schneider

Accelerator-based light sources stimulated progress in photon science in a truly extraordinary manner. The spectral brightness of storage-ring-based facilities increased by three orders of magnitude every 10 years since the 1960s. The extreme peak brightness at single-pass free electron X-ray lasers with pulse durations variable between about 1 and 300 femtoseconds will allow transformative experiments in many areas of science. This article is an attempt to show how progress in accelerator science and technology stimulated advancement in photon science, by discussing a limited number of examples of work at third generation storage ring facilities and free electron lasers. Hopes for further improvements in specific beam properties are expressed.


2008 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 649-660 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Priebe ◽  
D. Laundy ◽  
M.A. Macdonald ◽  
G.P. Diakun ◽  
S.P. Jamison ◽  
...  

AbstractInverse Compton scattering is a promising method to implement a high brightness, ultra-short, energy tunable X-ray source at accelerator facilities. We have developed an inverse Compton backscattering X-ray source driven by the multi-10 TW laser installed at Daresbury. Hard X-rays, with spectral peaks ranging from 15 to 30 keV, depending on the scattering geometry, will be generated through the interaction of laser pulses with electron bunches delivered by the energy recovery linac machine, initially known as energy recovery linac prototype and subsequently renamed accelerators and lasers in combined experiments. X-ray pulses containing 9 × 107 photons per pulse will be created from head-on collisions, with a pulse duration comparable to the incoming electron bunch length. For transverse collisions 8 × 106 photons per pulse will be generated, where the laser pulse transit time defines the X-ray pulse duration. The peak spectral brightness is predicted to be ~1021 photons/(s mm2 mrad2 0.1% Δλ/λ).


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