10 research outputs found
First Observation of Self-Amplified Spontaneous Emission in a Free-Electron Laser at 109 nm Wavelength
We present the first observation of Self-Amplified Spontaneous Emission
(SASE) in a free-electron laser (FEL) in the Vacuum Ultraviolet regime at 109
nm wavelength (11 eV). The observed free-electron laser gain (approx. 3000) and
the radiation characteristics, such as dependency on bunch charge, angular
distribution, spectral width and intensity fluctuations all corroborate the
existing models for SASE FELs.Comment: 6 pages including 6 figures; e-mail: [email protected]
Study of the statistical properties of the radiation from a VUVSASE FEL operating in the femtosecond regime
The Free-Electron Laser (FEL) at the TESLA Test Facility at DESY operates in the self-amplified spontaneous emission mode and generates sub-100-fs radiation pulses in the vacuum ultraviolet spectral region. During operation in the saturation regime, radiation pulses with GW peak power are produced. The statistical properties of the FEL radiation have been studied for different amplification regimes as well as behind a narrow-band monochromator and found to be in good agreement with the results of numerical simulations. Information about the spectral and temporal structure of the FEL radiation has been deduced from the statistical properties. The pulse duration of the FEL radiation can be varied by tailoring the electron bunch that drives the FEL
Generation of GW radiation pulses from a VUV free-electron laser operating in the femtosecond regime
Experimental results are presented from vacuum-ultraviolet free-electron laser (FEL) operating in the self-amplified spontaneous emission (SASE) mode. The generation of ultrashort radiation pulses became possible due to specific tailoring of the bunch charge distribution. A complete characterization of the linear and nonlinear modes of the SASE FEL operation was performed. At saturation the FEL produces ultrashort pulses (30-100 fs FWHM) with a peak radiation power in the GW level and with full transverse coherence. The wavelength was tuned in the range of 95-105 nm
Generation of GW radiation pulses from a VUV free-electron laser operating in the femtosecond regime.
Experimental results are presented from vacuum-ultraviolet free-electron laser (FEL) operating in the self-amplified spontaneous emission (SASE) mode. The generation of ultrashort radiation pulses became possible due to specific tailoring of the bunch charge distribution. A complete characterization of the linear and nonlinear modes of the SASE FEL operation was performed. At saturation the FEL produces ultrashort pulses (30-100 fs FWHM) with a peak radiation power in the GW level and with full transverse coherence. The wavelength was tuned in the range of 95-105 nm