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Laser-driven soft-X-ray undulator source

Abstract

The experimental results described in this thesis demonstrate the successful synergy between the research fields described above: the development of an undulator source driven by laser-plasma accelerated electron beams. First efforts in this new field have led to the production of radiation in the visible to infrared part of the electromagnetic spectrum [Schlenvoigt et al., 2008]. In contrast to these early achievements, the experiment described here shows the successful production of laser-driven undulator radiation in the soft-X-ray range with a remarkable reproducibility. The source produced tunable, collimated beams with a wavelength of {proportional_to}17 nm from a compact setup. Undulator spectra were detected in {proportional_to}70% of consecutive driver-laser shots, which is a remarkable reproducibility for a first proof-of-concept demonstration using ultra-high intensity laser systems. This can be attributed to a stable electron acceleration scheme as well as to the first application of miniature magnetic quadrupole lenses with laseraccelerated beams. The lenses significantly reduce the electron beam divergence and its angular shot-to-shot fluctuations The setup of this experiment is the foundation of potential university-laboratory-sized, highly-brilliant hard X-ray sources. By increasing the electron energy to about 1 GeV, X-ray pulses with an expected duration of {proportional_to}10 fs and a photon energy of 1  More>>
Authors:
Publication Date:
Aug 04, 2010
Product Type:
Thesis/Dissertation
Report Number:
INIS-DE-1101
Resource Relation:
Other Information: TH: Diss.
Subject:
43 PARTICLE ACCELERATORS; ACCELERATION; BEAM TRANSPORT; ELECTROMAGNETIC LENSES; ELECTROMAGNETIC PULSES; ELECTRON BEAMS; EV RANGE 100-1000; LASER RADIATION; MEV RANGE 100-1000; ONDULATOR RADIATION; SOFT X RADIATION; WAKEFIELD ACCELERATORS; X-RAY SOURCES; X-RAY SPECTRA
OSTI ID:
21423627
Research Organizations:
Muenchen Univ. (Germany). Fakultaet fuer Physik
Country of Origin:
Germany
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
TRN: DE11F5167
Availability:
Commercial reproduction prohibited; INIS; OSTI as DE21423627
Submitting Site:
DEN
Size:
180 pages
Announcement Date:
May 16, 2011

Citation Formats

Fuchs, Matthias. Laser-driven soft-X-ray undulator source. Germany: N. p., 2010. Web.
Fuchs, Matthias. Laser-driven soft-X-ray undulator source. Germany.
Fuchs, Matthias. 2010. "Laser-driven soft-X-ray undulator source." Germany.
@misc{etde_21423627,
title = {Laser-driven soft-X-ray undulator source}
author = {Fuchs, Matthias}
abstractNote = {The experimental results described in this thesis demonstrate the successful synergy between the research fields described above: the development of an undulator source driven by laser-plasma accelerated electron beams. First efforts in this new field have led to the production of radiation in the visible to infrared part of the electromagnetic spectrum [Schlenvoigt et al., 2008]. In contrast to these early achievements, the experiment described here shows the successful production of laser-driven undulator radiation in the soft-X-ray range with a remarkable reproducibility. The source produced tunable, collimated beams with a wavelength of {proportional_to}17 nm from a compact setup. Undulator spectra were detected in {proportional_to}70% of consecutive driver-laser shots, which is a remarkable reproducibility for a first proof-of-concept demonstration using ultra-high intensity laser systems. This can be attributed to a stable electron acceleration scheme as well as to the first application of miniature magnetic quadrupole lenses with laseraccelerated beams. The lenses significantly reduce the electron beam divergence and its angular shot-to-shot fluctuations The setup of this experiment is the foundation of potential university-laboratory-sized, highly-brilliant hard X-ray sources. By increasing the electron energy to about 1 GeV, X-ray pulses with an expected duration of {proportional_to}10 fs and a photon energy of 1 keV could be produced in an almost identical arrangement. It can also be used as a testbed for the development of a free-electron laser of significantly smaller dimension than facilities based on conventional accelerators [Gruener et al., 2007]. Such compact sources have the potential for application in many fields of science. In addition, these developments could lead to ideal sources for ultrafast pump-probe experiments due to the perfect synchronization of the X-ray beam to the driver laser. (orig.)}
place = {Germany}
year = {2010}
month = {Aug}
}