Author: Emma, P.
Paper Title Page
MOPB08 Studies for Polarization Control at LCLS 31
 
  • E. Allaria, Y.T. Ding, P. Emma, Z. Huang, H.-D. Nuhn, M. Rowen, J.J. Welch, J. Wu
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  In order to im­prove the ca­pa­bil­i­ties of LCLS to meet more of the user re­quire­ments it has been pro­posed to im­ple­ment a method to pro­duce cir­cu­larly po­lar­ized co­her­ent ra­di­a­tion in the LCLS free elec­tron laser. In this work we will pre­sent the re­sults of a new set of stud­ies and sim­u­la­tions that have been done for adding po­lar­iza­tion con­trol to LCLS using cir­cu­larly po­lar­iz­ing un­du­la­tors. At­ten­tion has been fo­cused mainly on the use of vari­able gap AP­PLE-II un­du­la­tors to be used at the end of a long SASE ra­di­a­tor that is based on the stan­dard pla­nar LCLS un­du­la­tors. Is­sues like po­lar­iza­tion con­t­a­m­i­na­tion from the pla­nar po­lar­ized light, po­lar­iza­tion fluc­tu­a­tion and the choice of un­du­la­tor con­fig­u­ra­tion have been stud­ied.  
 
WEPA06 Experimental Studies with Spatial Gaussian-cut Laser for the LCLS Photocathode Gun 341
 
  • F. Zhou, A. Brachmann, P. Emma, A. Gilevich, Z. Huang
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  Funding: U.S. Department of Energy under contract DE-AC02-76SF00515
To fur­ther en­hance the LCLS in­jec­tor per­for­mances or sim­plify its op­er­at­ing con­di­tions, we are eval­u­at­ing the var­i­ous pa­ra­me­ters in­clud­ing the pho­to­cath­ode drive laser. Sim­u­la­tions show that both the pro­jected and time-sliced emit­tances with spa­tial Gauss­ian pro­files hav­ing rea­son­able tail-cut­off are bet­ter than those with uni­form one. The sim­u­lated re­sults are also sup­ported by the­o­ret­i­cal analy­ses. In the LCLS, the spa­tial uni­form or quasi-Gauss­ian laser pro­files are con­ve­niently ob­tained by ad­just­ing the op­tics of tele­scope up­stream of an iris, used to de­fine laser size on the cath­ode. Pre­lim­i­nary beam stud­ies at the LCLS show that both the pro­jected and time-sliced emit­tances with spa­tial quasi-Gauss­ian laser are al­most as good as, al­though not bet­ter than, those with uni­form one, and also laser trans­mis­sion through the iris with the quasi-Gauss­ian is twice that with uni­form one, which is to ease cop­per cath­ode op­er­a­tions and thus im­prove the LCLS op­er­a­tion ef­fi­ciency. More beam stud­ies are planned in the com­ing sum­mer to mea­sure FEL per­for­mances with the quasi-Gauss­ian in com­par­i­son with the uni­form one. All sim­u­la­tions and mea­sure­ments are pre­sented.
 
 
WEPB14 Ultra-short Electron Bunch and X-ray Temporal Diagnostics with an X-band Transverse Deflector 405
 
  • C. Behrens
    DESY, Hamburg, Germany
  • Y.T. Ding, P. Emma, J.C. Frisch, Z. Huang, P. Krejcik, H. Loos, M.-H. Wang
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  The mea­sure­ment of ul­tra-short elec­tron bunches on the fem­tosec­ond time scale con­sti­tutes a very chal­leng­ing prob­lem. In X-ray free-elec­tron laser fa­cil­i­ties such as the Linac Co­her­ent Light Source (LCLS), gen­er­a­tion of sub-ten fem­tosec­ond X-ray pulses is pos­si­ble, and some ef­forts have been put into both ul­tra-short elec­tron and X-ray beam di­ag­nos­tics. Here we pro­pose a sin­gle-shot method using a trans­verse de­flec­tor (X-band) after the un­du­la­tor to re­con­struct both the elec­tron bunch and X-ray tem­po­ral pro­files. Sim­u­la­tion stud­ies show that about 1 fs (rms) time res­o­lu­tion may be achiev­able in the LCLS and is ap­plic­a­ble to a wide range of FEL wave­lengths and pulse lengths. The jit­ter, res­o­lu­tion and other re­lated is­sues will be dis­cussed.  
 
THOB5 FEL Spectral Measurements at LCLS 461
 
  • J.J. Welch, F.-J. Decker, Y.T. Ding, P. Emma, A.S. Fisher, J.C. Frisch, Z. Huang, R.H. Iverson, H. Loos, M. Messerschmidt, H.-D. Nuhn, D.F. Ratner, J.L. Turner, J. Wu
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported in part by the DOE Contract DE-AC02-76SF00515.
Con­trol and knowl­edge of the spec­trum of FEL X-ray ra­di­a­tion at the LCLS is im­por­tant to the qual­ity and in­ter­pre­ta­tion of ex­per­i­men­tal re­sults. Nar­row band­width is use­ful in ex­per­i­ments re­quir­ing high-bright­ness beams. Wide band­width is par­tic­u­larly use­ful for pho­ton en­ergy cal­i­bra­tion using ab­sorp­tion spec­tra. Since LCLS was com­mis­sioned in 2009 mea­sure­ments have been made of av­er­age and sin­gle shot spec­tra of X-ray FEL ra­di­a­tion at the LCLS over a range of 800 to 8000 eV, for fun­da­men­tal and har­monic ra­di­a­tion. These in­clude cor­re­la­tions with chirp, bunch cur­rent, un­du­la­tor K-ta­per, elec­tron beam en­ergy, and charge as well as some spe­cial­ized ma­chine con­fig­u­ra­tions. In this paper we pre­sent re­sults and dis­cuss the re­la­tion­ship of the elec­tron beam en­ergy dis­tri­b­u­tion to the ob­served X-ray spec­trum.
 
slides icon Slides THOB5 [0.442 MB]  
 
THOC4 Transverse Size and Distribution of FEL X-ray Radiation of the LCLS 465
 
  • J.L. Turner, F.-J. Decker, Y.T. Ding, P. Emma, J.C. Frisch, K. Horovitz, Z. Huang, R.H. Iverson, J. Krzywinski, H. Loos, M. Messerschmidt, S.P. Moeller, H.-D. Nuhn, D.F. Ratner, J.J. Welch, J. Wu
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, under Contract DE-AC02-76SF00515
Un­der­stand­ing and con­trol­ling the trans­verse size and dis­tri­b­u­tion of FEL X-ray ra­di­a­tion of the LCLS at the SLAC Na­tional Ac­cel­er­a­tor Lab­o­ra­tory is dis­cussed. Un­der­stand­ing di­ver­gence, source size, and dis­tri­b­u­tions under var­i­ous con­di­tions is a con­vo­lu­tion of many ef­fects such as the elec­tron dis­tri­b­u­tion, the un­du­la­tor align­ment, mi­cro-bunch­ing sup­pres­sion, and beta-match. Mea­sure­ments of trans­verse size along the X-ray pulse and other stud­ies de­signed to sort out the dom­i­nant ef­fects are pre­sented and dis­cussed.
 
slides icon Slides THOC4 [1.874 MB]  
 
THPB31 Multiple FELs from the One LCLS Undulator 629
 
  • F.-J. Decker, P. Emma, J.C. Frisch, K. Horovitz, Z. Huang, R.H. Iverson, J. Krzywinski, H. Loos, S.P. Moeller, H.-D. Nuhn, J.L. Turner, J.J. Welch, J. Wu
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Science, under Contract DE-AC02-76SF00515.
The FEL of the Linac Co­her­ent Light Source (LCLS) at SLAC is gen­er­ated in a 132 m long un­du­la­tor. By in­tro­duc­ing a kink in the un­du­la­tor setup and launch­ing dif­fer­ent elec­tron pulses with a small kick, we achieved two FEL beams with a sep­a­ra­tion of about 10 σ. These beams were sep­a­rated at down stream mir­rors and brought to the en­trances of the soft and hard X-ray hutches. This was done at low en­ergy cre­at­ing soft X-rays which re­quire only a shorter length to get to sat­u­ra­tion. At high en­ergy the whole un­du­la­tor has to be "re-pointed" pulse by pulse. This can be done using 33 un­du­la­tor cor­rec­tors cre­at­ing two straight lines for the pho­tons with small angle to point the FEL to dif­fer­ent mir­rors pulse by pulse even at high en­ergy. Ex­per­i­ments will be pre­sented and fur­ther ideas dis­cussed to get dif­fer­ent en­ergy pho­tons cre­ated and sent to the soft and hard X-ray mir­rors and ex­per­i­ments.