| Literature DB >> 27905401 |
David Gauthier1, Enrico Allaria1, Marcello Coreno1,2, Ivan Cudin1, Hugo Dacasa3, Miltcho Boyanov Danailov1, Alexander Demidovich1, Simone Di Mitri1, Bruno Diviacco1, Eugenio Ferrari1, Paola Finetti1, Fabio Frassetto4, David Garzella5, Swen Künzel6, Vincent Leroux7,8, Benoît Mahieu3, Nicola Mahne1, Michael Meyer9, Tommaso Mazza9, Paolo Miotti4, Giuseppe Penco1, Lorenzo Raimondi1, Primož Rebernik Ribič1, Robert Richter1, Eléonore Roussel1, Sebastian Schulz10, Luca Sturari1, Cristian Svetina1, Mauro Trovò1, Paul Andreas Walker7, Marco Zangrando1,11, Carlo Callegari1, Marta Fajardo6, Luca Poletto4, Philippe Zeitoun3, Luca Giannessi1,12, Giovanni De Ninno1,13.
Abstract
Chirped pulse amplification in optical lasers is a revolutionary technique, which allows the generation of extremely powerful femtosecond pulses in the infrared and visible spectral ranges. Such pulses are nowadays an indispensable tool for a myriad of applications, both in fundamental and applied research. In recent years, a strong need emerged for light sources producing ultra-short and intense laser-like X-ray pulses, to be used for experiments in a variety of disciplines, ranging from physics and chemistry to biology and material sciences. This demand was satisfied by the advent of short-wavelength free-electron lasers. However, for any given free-electron laser setup, a limit presently exists in the generation of ultra-short pulses carrying substantial energy. Here we present the experimental implementation of chirped pulse amplification on a seeded free-electron laser in the extreme-ultraviolet, paving the way to the generation of fully coherent sub-femtosecond gigawatt pulses in the water window (2.3-4.4 nm).Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27905401 PMCID: PMC5146278 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13688
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Scheme of a seeded free-electron laser in CPA mode.
When operated in CPA regime, the FEL is seeded with a Gaussian laser pulse carrying a linear frequency chirp. The seed interacts with electrons in a short undulator (the modulator). The resulting electron-beam energy modulation is transformed into a density modulation (bunching) when the electrons cross the magnetic field generated by a dispersive section. The bunching has a significant harmonic content at the frequency of the seed, ωseed, and at its harmonics. Finally, the modulated electrons are injected into a long undulator (the radiator), which is tuned to the nth harmonic of the seed. In the radiator, electrons emit coherently at the frequency ωFEL=nωseed. Under proper conditions, the frequency chirp of the seed is transmitted to the FEL harmonic pulse generated at the end of the radiator and can then be compensated by an optical compressor. The compressor includes four optical elements: two gratings (G1 and G2) in classical diffraction geometry and two plane mirrors (M1 and M2), which steer the beam back to its original propagation axis. After the exit of the compressor, the FEL beam is directed towards the experimental chamber of the FERMI Low Density Matter beamline (see: http://www.elettra.eu/lightsources/fermi/fermi-beamlines/ldm/ldmhome-page.html) where the FEL pulse duration is measured using a cross-correlation scheme. In the latter, the atoms of a He gas are photo-ionized by the FEL, assisted by a synchronized infrared laser pulse (see Fig. 2). A raw image is shown of a He photo-electron distribution acquired with a VMI spectrometer.
Figure 2Measurement of the FEL pulse duration.
Photo-electron spectra, obtained by inverting the electron distributions acquired with the VMI spectrometer (see Fig. 1), as a function of the delay between the FEL and infrared pulses. The reported measurement refers to the ‘standard' working conditions, that is, no stretching of the seed, no FEL compression. For the sake of visualization, only the first, second and third sidebands (normalized to the main line, associated to the direct photoemission process) are plotted. The inset shows three independent cross-correlation curves obtained by plotting the area under the peak of the second sideband as a function of the FEL-infrared delay. Also shown (dotted curve) is the deconvolved FEL pulse, which has an estimated duration of about 91 fs.
Figure 3FEL spectro-temporal characterization.
(a) Normalized single-shot spectra of the free-electron laser (FEL) pulse generated after stretching the seed pulse. (b) Three cross-correlation curves associated to the second sideband (see Fig. 2) for three independent FEL-infrared delay scans. The dotted curves represent the deconvolved FEL pulse (assumed to be Gaussian). (c) Same as b for the FEL operated in CPA mode and the grating angles optimized for maximum compression. As can be seen, the correlation curves from independent scans are quite similar to one another. Moreover, the analysis of the cross-correlation curves associated to the third sideband gives similar results (see Fig. 4). This strongly supports the reliability of the reported results.
Figure 4Compression of FEL pulse versus compressor setting.
Measured pulse duration as a function of the difference between the diffraction angles of the compressor gratings. Two sets of data are reported, obtained by the analysis of the second and third sideband, respectively, of the photoelectron energy spectrum. The two horizontal dashed lines correspond to the pulse duration expected when the FEL is operated in standard (no seed stretching, no FEL compression) or CPA regime.