152 research outputs found

    Transverse and Longitudinal Modulation of Photoinjection Pulses at FLUTE

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    To generate the electrons to be accelerated, a photoinjection laser is used at the linac-based test facility FLUTE (Ferninfrarot Linac- Und Test Experiment) at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT). The properties of the laser pulse, such as intensity, laser spot size or temporal profile, are the first parameters to influence the characteristics of the electron bunches. In order to control the initial parameters of the electrons in the most flexible way possible, the laser optics at FLUTE are therefore supplemented by additional setups that allow transverse and longitudinal laser pulse shaping by using so-called Spatial Light Modulators (SLMs). In the future, the control of the SLMs will be integrated into a Machine Learning (ML) supported feedback system for the optimization of the electron bunch properties. In this contribution the first test experiments and results on laser pulse shaping at FLUTE on the way to this project are presented

    Simulation of the Effect of Corrugated Structures on the Longitudinal Beam Dynamics at KARA

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    Two parallel corrugated plates will be installed at the KIT storage ring KARA (KArlsruhe Research Accelerator). This impedance manipulation structure will be used to study and eventually control the beam dynamics and the emitted coherent synchrotron radiation (CSR). In this contribution, we present the results obtained with the Vlasov-Fokker-Planck solver Inovesa showing the impedance impact of different corrugated structures on the bunch and its emitted CSR power

    Detailed Analysis of Transverse Emittance of the FLUTE Electron Bunch

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    The com­pact and ver­sa­tile lin­ear ac­cel­er­a­tor-based test fa­cil­ity FLUTE (Fer­n­in­frarot Linac- Und Test-Ex­per­i­ment) is op­er­ated at KIT. Its pri­mary goal is to serve as a plat­form for a va­ri­ety of ac­cel­er­a­tor R\&D stud­ies like the gen­er­a­tion of strong ul­tra-short ter­a­hertz pulses. The am­pli­tude of the gen­er­ated co­her­ent THz pulses is pro­por­tional to the square num­ber of par­ti­cles in the bunch. With the trans­verse emit­tance a mea­sure for the trans­verse par­ti­cle den­sity can be de­ter­mined. It is there­fore a vital pa­ra­me­ter in the op­ti­miza­tion for op­er­a­tion. In a sys­tem­atic study, the trans­verse emit­tance of the elec­tron beam was mea­sured in the FLUTE in­jec­tor. A de­tailed analy­sis con­sid­ers dif­fer­ent in­flu­ences such as the bunch charge and com­pares this with par­ti­cle track­ing sim­u­la­tions car­ried out with ASTRA. In this con­tri­bu­tion, the key find­ings of this analy­sis are dis­cussed

    Split Ring Resonator Experiment - Simulation Results

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    FLUTE (Ferninfrarot Linac- Und Test-Experiment) is a compact linac-based test facility for accelerator and diagnostics R&D. An example for a new accelerator diagnostics tool currently studied at FLUTE is the split-ring-resonator (SRR) experiment, which aims to measure the longitudinal bunch profile of fs-scale electron bunches. Laser-generated THz radiation is used to excite a high frequency oscillating electromagnetic field in the SRR. Particles passing through the SRR gap are time-dependently deflected in the vertical plane, which allows a vertical streaking of an electron bunch. This principle allows a diagnosis of the longitudinal bunch profile in the femtosecond time domain and will be tested at FLUTE. This contribution presents an overview of the SRR experiment and the results of various tracking simulations for different scenarios as a function of laser pulse length and bunch charge. Based on these results possible working points for the experiments at FLUTE will be proposed

    Measuring the Coherent Synchrotron Radiation Far Field with Electro-Optical Techniques

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    For measuring the temporal profile of the coherent synchrotron radiation (CSR) a setup based on electro-optical spectral decoding (EOSD) will be installed as part of the sensor network at the KIT storage ring KARA (Karlsruhe Research Accelerator). The EOSD technique allows a single-shot, phase sensitive measurement of the complete spectrum of the CSR far field radiation at each turn. Therefore, the dynamics of the bunch evolution, e.g. the microbunching, can be observed in detail. Especially, in synchronized combination with the already established near-field EOSD, this method could provide deeper insights in the interplay of bunch profile and CSR generation for each individual electron bunch. For a successful implementation of the EOSD single shot setup, measurements with electro-optical sampling (EOS) are performed. With EOS the THz pulse shape is scanned over several turns by shifting the delay of laser and THz pulse. In this contribution different steps towards the installation of the EOSD far field setup are summarized

    Estimating and correcting interference fringes in infrared spectra in infrared hyperspectral imaging

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    Short-term acclimation response of individual cells of Thalassiosira weissflogii was monitored by Synchrotron FTIR imaging over the span of 75 minutes. The cells, collected from batch cultures, were maintained in a constant flow of medium, at an irradiance of 120 μmol m−2 s−1 and at 20 °C. Multiple internal reflections due to the micro fluidic channel were modeled, and showed that fringes are additive sinusoids to the pure absorption of the other components of the system. Preprocessing of the hyperspectral cube (x, y, Abs(λ)) included removing spectral fringe using an EMSC approach. Principal component analysis of the time series of hyperspectral cubes showed macromolecular pool variations (carbohydrates, lipids and DNA/RNA) of less than 2% after fringe correction

    CdSe-single-nanoparticle based active tips for near-field optical microscopy

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    We present a method to realize active optical tips for use in near-field optics that can operate at room temperature. A metal-coated optical tip is covered with a thin polymer layer stained with CdSe nanocrystals or nanorods at low density. The time analysis of the emission rate and emission spectra of the active tips reveal that a very small number of particles - possibly down to only one - can be made active at the tip apex. This opens the way to near-field optics with a single inorganic nanoparticle as a light source
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