An ultra-compact x-ray free-electron laser

In the field of beam physics, two frontier topics have taken center stage due to their potential to enable new approaches to discovery in a wide swath of science. These areas are: advanced, high gradient acceleration techniques, and x-ray free electron lasers (XFELs). Further, there is intense inter...

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Veröffentlicht in:New journal of physics 2020-09, Vol.22 (9), p.93067
Hauptverfasser: Rosenzweig, J B, Majernik, N, Robles, R R, Andonian, G, Camacho, O, Fukasawa, A, Kogar, A, Lawler, G, Miao, Jianwei, Musumeci, P, Naranjo, B, Sakai, Y, Candler, R, Pound, B, Pellegrini, C, Emma, C, Halavanau, A, Hastings, J, Li, Z, Nasr, M, Tantawi, S, Anisimov, P., Carlsten, B, Krawczyk, F, Simakov, E, Faillace, L, Ferrario, M, Spataro, B, Karkare, S, Maxson, J, Ma, Y, Wurtele, J, Murokh, A, Zholents, A, Cianchi, A, Cocco, D, van der Geer, S B
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In the field of beam physics, two frontier topics have taken center stage due to their potential to enable new approaches to discovery in a wide swath of science. These areas are: advanced, high gradient acceleration techniques, and x-ray free electron lasers (XFELs). Further, there is intense interest in the marriage of these two fields, with the goal of producing a very compact XFEL. In this context, recent advances in high gradient radio-frequency cryogenic copper structure research have opened the door to the use of surface electric fields between 250 and 500 MV m−1. Such an approach is foreseen to enable a new generation of photoinjectors with six-dimensional beam brightness beyond the current state-of-the-art by well over an order of magnitude. This advance is an essential ingredient enabling an ultra-compact XFEL (UC-XFEL). In addition, one may accelerate these bright beams to GeV scale in less than 10 m. Such an injector, when combined with inverse free electron laser-based bunching techniques can produce multi-kA beams with unprecedented beam quality, quantified by 50 nm-rad normalized emittances. The emittance, we note, is the effective area in transverse phase space (x, p x /m e c) or (y, p y /m e c) occupied by the beam distribution, and it is relevant to achievable beam sizes as well as setting a limit on FEL wavelength. These beams, when injected into innovative, short-period (1-10 mm) undulators uniquely enable UC-XFELs having footprints consistent with university-scale laboratories. We describe the architecture and predicted performance of this novel light source, which promises photon production per pulse of a few percent of existing XFEL sources. We review implementation issues including collective beam effects, compact x-ray optics systems, and other relevant technical challenges. To illustrate the potential of such a light source to fundamentally change the current paradigm of XFELs with their limited access, we examine possible applications in biology, chemistry, materials, atomic physics, industry, and medicine-including the imaging of virus particles-which may profit from this new model of performing XFEL science.
ISSN:1367-2630
1367-2630
DOI:10.1088/1367-2630/abb16c