Author: Penn, G.
Paper Title Page
THP174 A Single Cavity Echo Scheme 2438
 
  • P.R. Gandhi, J.S. Wurtele
    UCB, Berkeley, California, USA
  • X.W. Gu
    UESTC, Chengdu, Sichuan, People's Republic of China
  • G. Penn, M.W. Reinsch
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
 
  Funding: This work was supported by the DIrector, Office of Science, of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231.
The possibility of implementing echo-enabled harmonic generation* (EEHG) within a single optical resonance cavity is explored both analytically and with numerical simulations. Two modulators of the same frequency are used so that the cavity radiation replaces the two seed lasers of conventional EEHG. Such a scheme has potential** to produce tunable radiation as in EEHG, but with the high repetition rate, longitudinal coherence, and narrow spectral bandwidth of an oscillator. These benefits, however, come with the complication that the beam must generate the radiation that modulates it. Analysis and GINGER simulations are presented for a specific example that takes advantage of robust multilayer mirror performance at 13.4 nm to produce radiation near or possibly even below 1 nm.
* G. Stupakov, Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 074801 (2009).
** J. Wurtele et al., Proc. of the 2010 FEL Conference, TUOC12.
 
 
THP180 Studies of a Linac Driver for a High Repetition Rate X-ray FEL 2450
 
  • M. Venturini, J.N. Corlett, L.R. Doolittle, D. Filippetto, C. F. Papadopoulos, G. Penn, D. Prosnitz, J. Qiang, M.W. Reinsch, R.D. Ryne, F. Sannibale, J.W. Staples, R.P. Wells, J.S. Wurtele, M.S. Zolotorev
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
  • A. Zholents
    ANL, Argonne, USA
 
  Funding: Work carried out under Department of Energy contract No. DE-AC02-0SCK11231
We report on on-going studies of a superconducting CW linac driver intended to support a high repetition rate FEL operating in the soft x-rays spectrum. We present a point-design for a 1.8 GeV machine tuned for 300~pC bunches and delivering low-emittance, low-energy spread beams as needed for the SASE and seeded beamlines.
 
 
THP200 Photoinjector Beam Dynamics for a Next Generation X-Ray FEL 2495
 
  • C. F. Papadopoulos, J.N. Corlett, D. Filippetto, G. Penn, J. Qiang, F. Sannibale, J.W. Staples, M. Venturini, R.P. Wells, M.S. Zolotorev
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
 
  Funding: This work was supported by the Director of the Office of Science of the US Department of Energy under Contract no. DEAC02-05CH11231.
In this paper, we will present the status of the beam dynamics simulations for a Next Generation Light Source (NGLS) injector, based on a high repetition rate (1 MHz), high brightness design. A multi-stage beam compression scheme is proposed, based on the concepts of velocity bunching and emittance compensation. For the optimization of the design parameters we use a genetic algorithm approach, and we focus on a mode providing charges of 300 pC, with normalized transverse emittance less than 0.6 microns, suitable to operate a next generation light source based on an X-ray FEL. In addition, we discuss the effects of bunch compression and linearity of the transverse and longitudinal phase space of the beam.
 
 
TUOCS5 A Next Generation Light Source Facility at LBNL 775
 
  • J.N. Corlett, B. Austin, K.M. Baptiste, J.M. Byrd, P. Denes, R.J. Donahue, L.R. Doolittle, R.W. Falcone, D. Filippetto, D.S. Fournier, J. Kirz, D. Li, H.A. Padmore, C. F. Papadopoulos, G.C. Pappas, G. Penn, M. Placidi, S. Prestemon, D. Prosnitz, J. Qiang, A. Ratti, M.W. Reinsch, F. Sannibale, D. Schlueter, R.W. Schoenlein, J.W. Staples, T. Vecchione, M. Venturini, R.P. Wells, R.B. Wilcox, J.S. Wurtele
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
  • A.E. Charman, E. Kur
    UCB, Berkeley, California, USA
  • A. Zholents
    ANL, Argonne, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by the Director, Office of Science, of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231
The Next Generation Light Source (NGLS) is a design concept, under development at LBNL, for a multi‐beamline soft x‐ray FEL array powered by a 2 GeV superconducting linear accelerator, operating with a 1 MHz bunch repetition rate. The CW superconducting linear accelerator is supplied by a high-brightness, high-repetition-rate photocathode electron gun. Electron bunches are distributed from the linac to the array of independently configurable FEL beamlines with nominal bunch rates up to 100 kHz in each FEL, and with even pulse spacing. Individual FELs may be configured for EEHG, HGHG, SASE, or oscillator mode of operation, and will produce high peak and average brightness x-rays with a flexible pulse format, and with pulse durations ranging from sub-femtoseconds to hundreds of femtoseconds.
 
slides icon Slides TUOCS5 [4.758 MB]