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Ludwig, F.

Paper Title Page
THOA3 RF-based Synchronization of the Seed and Pump-Probe Lasers to the Optical Synchronization System at FLASH 544
 
  • M. Felber, M.K. Bock, P. Gessler, K.E. Hacker, T. Lamb, F. Ludwig, H. Schlarb, B. Schmidt
    DESY, Hamburg
  • J. Breunlin, S. Schulz, L.-G. Wißmann
    Uni HH, Hamburg
 
 

At FLASH, UV and soft X-Ray pulses with durations in the order of 10 fs are generated. To fully exploit the opportunities provided by these short laser pulses, an optical synchronization system provides the possibility to synchronize external lasers and stabilize the electron bunch arrival time with 10 fs precision. A seeded free-electron-laser (FEL) section, called sFLASH, is installed upstream of the existing SASE undulators. After higher-harmonic-generation, the femtosecond seed laser pulse needs to be temporarily and spatially overlapped with the electron bunch. Furthermore, for time-resolved pump-probe experiments, using an experimental laser and the FEL pulse, either of sFLASH or of the ordinary SASE process, the synchronization between pump and probe laser pulses is crucial. While the best performance for synchronizing these lasers within 10 fs will be achieved by using an optical cross-correlator, in this paper we present a precursor that relies on an RF-based locking mechanism. The setup includes a coarse and a fine phase measurement between the laser pulses of the reference and the synchronized system after their conversion to an RF signal.

 

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Slides

 
THPA04 Longitudinal Bunch Arrival-Time Feedback at FLASH 578
 
  • P. Gessler, M.K. Bock, M. Felber, K.E. Hacker, W. Koprek, F. Ludwig, H. Schlarb, B. Schmidt, S. Schulz
    DESY, Hamburg
 
 

Electron bunches at the free electron laser FLASH at DESY have a duration of 10 fs to 150 fs and an arrival-time jitter of about 150 fs (rms). It is anticipated that the newly installed optical synchronisation system will stabilize the seed and pump-probe lasers to within ~10 fs. In order to perform reliable and stable seeding, the electron bunch timing jitter needs to be reduced. Bunch arrival-time monitors measure the arrival-time fluctuations at different locations and are used in a beam-based feedback loop to correct the amplitude of the accelerator RF. In order to provide reliable operation and high availability of the bunch arrival-time feedback, intensive efforts have been undertaken in system automation and exception handling. This will be discussed along with the latest results and limitations on the stability of the arrival-times at FLASH.

 
THPA05 Performance of the FLASH Optical Synchronization System Utilizing a Commercial SESAM-Based Erbium Laser 581
 
  • S. Schulz, L.-G. Wißmann
    Uni HH, Hamburg
  • M.K. Bock, M. Felber, P. Gessler, K.E. Hacker, T. Lamb, F. Ludwig, H. Schlarb, B. Schmidt
    DESY, Hamburg
 
 

The optical synchronization system of the free-electron laser in Hamburg (FLASH) is based on the stabilized pulse-train distribution of a passively mode-locked laser. This master laser oscillator is based on erbium-doped fiber technology and is built in a σ-configuration, enabling passive mode-locking through nonlinear polarization evolution. Recently, a commercial laser system has been installed in addition to the existing laser. Besides maintenance-free operation, this SESAM-based laser shows an even lower timing jitter, enabling a tighter synchronization to the accelerator's RF reference. In this paper we report on the commissioning, the characterization and the long-term stabilty of the new laser system, as well as on the performance of the laser with the existing pulse-train distribution scheme and optical front-ends of the synchronization system in comparison to the old one.

 
THPA06 Real-Time Sampling and Processing Hardware for Bunch Arrival-Time Monitors at FLASH and XFEL 585
 
  • P. Gessler, M.K. Bock, M. Felber, K.E. Hacker, F. Ludwig, H. Schlarb, B. Schmidt, S. Schulz
    DESY, Hamburg
  • J. Szewinski
    Warsaw University of Technology, Institute of Electronic Systems, Warsaw
 
 

Bunch arrival-time monitors measure the arrival-time of each bunch in the electron bunch train at several locations at FLASH. The temporal reference for the monitors is provided by the optical synchronization system which distributes laser pulses with a repetition rate of 216 MHz and a length of around 200 fs FWHM. The pulses are delivered to the monitors with an arrival-time stability of about 10 fs. The bunch arrival-time is encoded as an amplitude modulation of a laser pulse from the optical synchronization system. These laser pulse amplitudes need to be sampled and processed together with additional input parameters. Because the arrival-time information is used in a feedback loop to adjust the accelerator fields, the signal processing, calibration and transmission of the bunch arrival-time information via a low-latency, high-speed link to an accelerator RF control station is needed. The most challenging problems of the signal processing are the synchronisation of several clock domains, regeneration and conversion of optical laser pulses, on-line calibration, and exception handling.