| Literature DB >> 26314764 |
E Ferrari1,2, E Allaria1, J Buck3, G De Ninno1,4, B Diviacco1, D Gauthier1,4, L Giannessi1,5, L Glaser6, Z Huang7, M Ilchen3,8, G Lambert9, A A Lutman7, B Mahieu9, G Penco1, C Spezzani1, J Viefhaus6.
Abstract
Polarization control is a key feature of light generated by short-wavelength free-electron lasers. In this work, we report the first experimental characterization of the polarization properties of an extreme ultraviolet high gain free-electron laser operated with crossed polarized undulators. We investigate the average degree of polarization and the shot-to-shot stability and we analyze aspects such as existing possibilities for controlling and switching the polarization state of the emitted light. The results are in agreement with predictions based on Gaussian beams propagation.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26314764 PMCID: PMC4551986 DOI: 10.1038/srep13531
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Degree of linear polarization (P) and (b) direction of the polarization vector (θ) for the FEL produced when all the undulators are tuned to “pure” LH polarized light. The lines represent the moving average over 30 shots of the reported quantities. The histograms show the distribution of the data.
Figure 2Schematic representation of the FEL-1 setup.
The crossed polarized undulator scheme can be implemented as a superposition of two consecutives sources (a) or in a distributed scheme (b). Red and green represent undulators with two orthogonal polarizations (P1 and P2) that can be either CR - CL, or LH - LV that produce FEL pulses with corresponding polarization properties ( and ). MOD is the modulator undulator, R56 is the dispersive section (see Methods).
Figure 3Degree and direction of the linear polarization component for the crossed circularly polarized undulators.
(a) and (b) are relative to the consecutive scheme (Fig. 2(a)), while (c) and (d) refer to the distributed scheme (Fig. 2(b)). The lines represent the moving average over 30 shots of the reported quantities.
Figure 4Degree of linear polarization P as a function of the phase shift between the two undulator groups, when LH and LV polarization are composed in the crossed polarized undulator scheme.
The dots display the individual shot-to-shot measurements for each given phase shift with the measured errorbar computed respectively as the average and RMS of the acquired data for each value of the phase shift.
Figure 5Direction of linear polarization θ as a function of the phase shift between two undulator groups, when CL and CR radiations are composed to realize the crossed polarized undulator scheme.
Relevant parameters for the FEL configuration used in the experiment.
| Undulator length | 6 × 2.4 m |
| Break length | 1.3 m |
| FEL wavelength | 32 nm |
| FEL source size (rms) | 150 |
| FEL Rayleigh range | 2.2 m |
| FEL pulse energy | 50 |