Paper | Title | Page |
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THOB5 | FEL Spectral Measurements at LCLS | 461 |
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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. |
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Slides THOB5 [0.442 MB] | |
THOC4 | Transverse Size and Distribution of FEL X-ray Radiation of the LCLS | 465 |
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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. |
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Slides THOC4 [1.874 MB] | |
MOPB21 | Seeded Radiation Sources with Sawtooth Waveforms | 53 |
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Despite the recent success of SASE-based FELs, there is still considerable interest in driving coherent radiation sources with external seeding. Seeding schemes, such as HGHG and EEHG, can increase longitudinal coherence, decrease saturation lengths, and improve performance of tapering, polarization control and other FEL features. Typically, seeding schemes start with a simple sinusoidal modulation, which is manipulated to provide bunching at a high harmonic of the original wavelength. In this paper, we consider variations starting with a sawtooth modulation. The sawtooth creates a clean phase space structure, providing a maximal bunching factor without the need for an FEL interaction. While a pure sawtooth modulation is a theoretical construct, it is possible to approach the waveform by combining two or more of the composite wavelengths. We give examples of sawtooth seeding for HGHG, EEHG and other schemes including compressed seeding, steady state microbunching, and reversible seeding. Finally, we note that the sawtooth modulation may aid in suppression of the microbunching instability. | ||
MOPB23 | Reversible Seeding in Storage Rings | 57 |
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We propose to generate steady-state microbunching in a storage ring by implementing a reversible seeding scheme. High gain harmonic generation (HGHG) and echo-enhanced harmonic generation (EEHG) are two promising methods for microbunching linac electron beams. Because both schemes increase the energy spread of the seeded beam, they cannot drive a coherent radiator turn-by-turn in a storage ring. However, reversing the seeding process following the radiator minimizes the impact on the electron beam and may allow coherent radiation at or near the storage ring repetition rate. In this paper we describe the general idea and outline a proof-of-principle experiment. | ||