| Literature DB >> 25744344 |
A Marinelli1, D Ratner1, A A Lutman1, J Turner1, J Welch1, F-J Decker1, H Loos1, C Behrens2, S Gilevich1, A A Miahnahri1, S Vetter1, T J Maxwell1, Y Ding1, R Coffee1, S Wakatsuki3, Z Huang1.
Abstract
The X-ray free-electron laser has opened a new era for photon science, improving the X-ray brightness by ten orders of magnitude over previously available sources. Similar to an optical laser, the spectral and temporal structure of the radiation pulses can be tailored to the specific needs of many experiments by accurately manipulating the lasing medium, that is, the electron beam. Here we report the generation of mJ-level two-colour hard X-ray pulses of few femtoseconds duration with an XFEL driven by twin electron bunches at the Linac Coherent Light Source. This performance represents an improvement of over an order of magnitude in peak power over state-of-the-art two-colour XFELs. The unprecedented intensity and temporal coherence of this new two-colour X-ray free-electron laser enable an entirely new set of scientific applications, ranging from X-ray pump/X-ray probe experiments to the imaging of complex biological samples with multiple wavelength anomalous dispersion.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25744344 PMCID: PMC4366525 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms7369
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Schematic representation of the experiment.
Illustration not to scale. From right to left: a laser pulse train generates two electron bunches at a photocathode (the right inset shows the measured longitudinal phase-space at the photo-injector exit). The two bunches are accelerated in the LCLS linac and compressed by means of two magnetic chicanes (the left inset shows the measured phase-space at the end of the beam line). Finally, the two bunches are sent to an undulator for the emission of two X-ray FEL pulses. The two X-ray pulses have a tunable energy difference in the range of a few percent and a variable time delay of tens of fs.
Figure 2Time-resolved measurements.
(a) Measured longitudinal phase-space of the two unspoiled electron bunches at the end of the beam-line (the FEL process being suppressed). (b) Associated current profile of the two bunches. (c) Measured longitudinal phase-space of the two bunches after lasing. (d) Temporal profile of the two X-ray pulses reconstructed from the two phase-space measurements. The error bars are derived from the averaging of 100 unspoiled phase-space measurements, as discussed in ref. 13. The horizontal axis represents the arrival time with respect to a fixed observer (the beam head is on the left).
Figure 3Spectral measurements: SASE.
(a) Spectral intensity as a function of beam energy and photon energy in the SASE regime. (b) Average and single-shot spectrum for a fixed beam energy (the data are binned over electron beam energy fluctuations).
Figure 4Spectral measurements: self-seeding.
(a) Spectral intensity as a function of beam energy and photon energy in the self-seeded regime. (b) Average and single-shot spectrum for a fixed beam energy (the data are binned over electron beam energy fluctuations).
Figure 5Final time delay variation.
Phase-space, current profile and energy profile of the two bunches for an initial delay of 8 ps (a) and 12 ps (b). The final time delays are 30 and 125 fs. Both the energy separation and the peak current are unchanged.