| Literature DB >> 33574378 |
Michael Diez1,2, Andreas Galler3,4, Sebastian Schulz5,6,7, Christina Boemer3,8, Ryan N Coffee9, Nick Hartmann9,10, Rupert Heider11, Martin S Wagner11, Wolfram Helml11,12,13, Tetsuo Katayama14,15, Tokushi Sato16,3, Takahiro Sato9, Makina Yabashi14,15, Christian Bressler17,18.
Abstract
We present a novel, highly versatile, and self-referenced arrival time monitor for measuring the femtosecond time delay between a hard X-ray pulse from a free-electron laser and an optical laser pulse, measured directly on the same sample used for pump-probe experiments. Two chirped and picosecond long optical supercontinuum pulses traverse the sample with a mutually fixed time delay of 970 fs, while a femtosecond X-ray pulse arrives at an instant in between both pulses. Behind the sample the supercontinuum pulses are temporally overlapped to yield near-perfect destructive interference in the absence of the X-ray pulse. Stimulation of the sample with an X-ray pulse delivers non-zero contributions at certain optical wavelengths, which serve as a measure of the relative arrival time of the X-ray pulse with an accuracy of better than 25 fs. We find an excellent agreement of our monitor with the existing timing diagnostics at the SACLA XFEL with a Pearson correlation value of 0.98. We demonstrate a high sensitivity to measure X-ray pulses with pulse energies as low as 30 [Formula: see text]J. Using a free-flowing liquid jet as interaction sample ensures the full replacement of the sample volume for each X-ray/optical event, thus enabling its utility even at MHz repetition rate XFEL sources.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33574378 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-82597-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379