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Ding, Y.T.

Paper Title Page
MOPB28 Three-Dimensional Analysis of Frequency-Chirped FELs 91
 
  • Z. Huang, Y.T. Ding, J. Wu
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
 
 

Frequency-chirped FELs are useful to generate a large photon bandwidth or a shorter x-ray pulse duration. In this paper, we present a three-dimensional analysis of a high-gain FEL driven by the energy-chirped electron beam. We show that the FEL eigenmode equation is the same for a frequency-chirped FEL as for an undulator-tapered FEL. We study the transverse effects of such FELs including mode properties and transverse coherence. Comparison with numerical simulations are also discussed.

 
MOPC14 LCLS X-Ray Pulse Duration Measurement Using the Statistical Fluctuation Method 147
 
  • J. Wu, Y.T. Ding, P. Emma, Z. Huang, H. Loos, M. Messerschmidt
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
  • E. Schneidmiller, M.V. Yurkov
    DESY, Hamburg
 
 

For a SASE-FEL, the FEL pulse energy fluctuates from shot to shot, because the lasing process starts up from shot noise. When operating in the exponential growth regime, the radiation exhibits the properties of completely chaotic polarized light. Hence, the probability distribution of the FEL pulse energy follows a gamma distribution. Based on the measurement of such a distribution function, one can calculate the average number of ‘degrees of freedom’ or ‘modes’ in the radiation pulse. Thus, one can measure the FEL pulse temporal duration. In this paper, we report experimental results at LCLS. Measurements are conducted for both nominal charge (250 pC) and low charge (20 pC) cases. For both cases, results are obtained for different undulator lengths and various electron peak current settings.

 
MOPC16 Transverse-Coherence Properties of the FEL at the LCLS 151
 
  • Y.T. Ding, Z. Huang
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
  • S.A. Ocko
    MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts
 
 

The Linac Coherent Light Source has achieved stable operation at x-ray wavelengths of 20-1.2 Angstrom with peak brightness many orders of magnitude beyond conventional synchrotron sources. Understanding transverse coherence properties of such a SASE source is of great practical importance for user experiments. Based on a fast Monte Carlo algorithm, we present numerical analysis of the LCLS coherence properties for the simulated radiation fields at different wavelengths and bunch charges.

 
TUOB4 Second and Third Harmonic Measurements at the Linac Coherent Light Source 206
 
  • D.F. Ratner, A. Brachmann, F.-J. Decker, Y.T. Ding, D. Dowell, P. Emma, J.C. Frisch, Z. Huang, R.H. Iverson, J. Krzywinski, H. Loos, M. Messerschmidt, H.-D. Nuhn, T.J. Smith, J.L. Turner, J.J. Welch, W.E. White, J. Wu
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
  • R.M. Bionta
    LLNL, Livermore, California
 
 

The Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) is a Free Electron Laser (FEL) operating with a fundamental wavelength ranging from 1.5-0.15 nm. Characterization of the higher harmonics present in the beam is important to users, for whom harder X-rays can either extend the useful operating wavelength range or represent a background to measurements. We present here measurements of the power in both the second and third harmonics.

 

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WEOB3 A Single-Shot Method for Measuring Femtosecond Bunch Length in Linac-Based Free-Electron Lasers 353
 
  • Z. Huang, K.L.F. Bane, Y.T. Ding, P. Emma
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
 
 

There is a growing interest in the generation and characterization of femtosecond and sub-femtosecond pulses from linac-based free-electron lasers (FELs). In this paper we study a simple longitudinal transformation* for measuring a very short electron bunch. We show that this method can be applied in a straightforward manner at x-ray FEL facilities such as the Linac Coherent Light Source by slightly adjusting the second bunch compressor followed by running the bunch on an rf zero-crossing phase of the final linac. After taking into account the linac wakefield, we find the condition under which the final beam energy spread corresponds directly to the compressed bunch length. When used in conjunction with a high-resolution electron spectrometer, this method potentially reveals temporal information of femtosecond and sub-femtosecond electron bunches used by such FELs.


* K. Ricci and T. Smith, Phys. Rev. ST-AB 3, 032801 (2000).

 

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WEPB33 A Demonstration of Multi-bunch Operation in the LCLS 467
 
  • F.-J. Decker, R. Akre, A. Brachmann, Y.T. Ding, D. Dowell, P. Emma, A.S. Fisher, J.C. Frisch, A. Gilevich, P. Hering, Z. Huang, R.H. Iverson, H. Loos, M. Messerschmidt, H.-D. Nuhn, D.F. Ratner, W.F. Schlotter, T.J. Smith, J.L. Turner, J.J. Welch, W.E. White, J. Wu
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
 
 

The Linac Coherent Light Source at SLAC is a hard X-ray FEL which was designed for single electron bunch operation. Although most user experiments are not interested in multiple bunches from an S-band linac due to their short (ns) separation, there are some advantages with multi-bunch operation. Starting with two bunches where the delayed light of one bunch is used to seed the light of a second bunch, to many more bunches to increase the likelihood of rare target collisions, multi-bunch operation would open more options for the LCLS. In the past the SLAC Linac has operated with a few dedicated bunches for the SLC (Stanford Linear Collider), and up to 1400 bunches for some fixed target experiments, so a few bunches for the LCLS seems possible even with the original single bunch design. This paper will describe how the current RF implementation supports multi-bunch operation. Initial experimental tests with two bunches are presented.

 
THOCI2 Characterization of Second Harmonic Afterburner Radiation at the LCLS* 690
 
  • H.-D. Nuhn, F.-J. Decker, Y.T. Ding, P. Emma, J.C. Frisch, Z. Huang, R.H. Iverson, Yu.I. Levashov, H. Loos, M. Messerschmidt, D.F. Ratner, J.L. Turner, J.J. Welch, Z.R. Wolf, J. Wu
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
 
 

During undulator commissioning of the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) x-ray Free Electron Laser (FEL) at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory it was shown that saturation lengths much shorter than the installed length of the undulator line can routinely be achieved. This frees undulator segments that can be used to provide enhanced spectral properties and at the same time, test the concept of FEL Afterburners. In December 2009 a project was initiated to convert undulator segments at the down-beam end of the undulator line into Second Harmonic Afterburners (SHAB) to enhance LCLS radiation levels in the 10 – 20 keV energy range. This is being accomplished by replacement of gap-shims increasing the fixed gaps from 6.8 mm to 9.9 mm, which reduces their K values from 3.50 to 2.25 and makes the segments resonant at the second harmonic of the upstream unmodified undulators. The paper reports experimental results of the commissioning of the SHAB extension to LCLS.

 

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