The quantum mechanical motion of electrons in molecules and solids occurs on the sub-femtosecond timescale. Consequently, the study of ultrafast electronic phenomena requires the generation of laser pulses shorter than 1 fs and of sufficient intensity to interact with their target with high probability.Probing these dynamics with atomic-site specificity requires the extension of sub-femtosecond pulses to the soft X-ray spectral region. Here we report the generation of isolated GW-scale soft X-ray attosecond pulses with an X-ray free-electron laser. Our source has a pulse energy that is six orders of magnitude larger than any other source of isolated attosecond pulses in the soft X-ray spectral region, with a peak power in the tens of gigawatts. This unique combination of high intensity, high photon energy and short pulse duration enables the investigation of electron dynamics with X-ray non-linear spectroscopy and single-particle imaging.their assistance in designing, constructing and installing the XLEAP wiggler. We also acknowledge the SLAC Accelerator Operations group, and the Mechanical and Electrical engineering divisions of the SLAC Accelerator Directorate, especially
A microbunching instability driven by longitudinal space charge, coherent synchrotron radiation, and linac wakefields is studied for the linac coherent light source (LCLS) accelerator system. Since the uncorrelated (local) energy spread of electron beams generated from a photocathode rf gun is very small, the microbunching gain may be large enough to significantly amplify rf-gun generated modulations or even shot-noise fluctuations of the electron beam. The uncorrelated energy spread can be increased by an order of magnitude to provide strong Landau damping against the instability without degrading the free-electron laser performance. We study different damping options in the LCLS and discuss an effective laser heater to minimize the impact of the instability on the quality of the electron beam.
In megabar shock waves, materials compress and undergo a phase transition to a dense charged-particle system that is dominated by strong correlations and quantum effects. This complex state, known as warm dense matter, exists in planetary interiors and many laboratory experiments (for example, during high-power laser interactions with solids or the compression phase of inertial confinement fusion implosions). Here, we apply record peak brightness X-rays at the Linac Coherent Light Source to resolve ionic interactions at atomic (ångström) scale lengths and to determine their physical properties. Our in situ measurements characterize the compressed lattice and resolve the transition to warm dense matter, demonstrating that short-range repulsion between ions must be accounted for to obtain accurate structure factor and equation of state data. In addition, the unique properties of the X-ray laser provide plasmon spectra that yield the temperature and density with unprecedented precision at micrometre-scale resolution in dynamic compression experiments. M aterials exposed to high pressures of 1 Mbar and above have recently been the subject of increased attention due to their importance for the physics of planetary formation 1-3 , for material science 4 and for inertial confinement fusion research 5 . The behaviour of shock-compressed aluminium is of particular interest because it has been proposed as a standard for shock-wave experiments 6 and is widely used for equation-of-state 7,8 and warm dense matter (WDM) 9,10 studies. At room temperature, aluminium has three delocalized electrons, so it provides a prototype for an ideal electron fluid. As temperatures and pressures increase, compressing and breaking ionic lattice bonds, strong ionic forces remain, resulting in significant deviations from a simple fluid.Simulations using density functional theory coupled to manyparticle molecular dynamics (DFT-MD) have evolved into an ab initio tool to explore this regime of high-pressure physics 11,12 . To date, these simulations have been used to predict physical properties derived from optical observations of particle and shock velocities. Studies of structural properties that are sensitive to many-particle electron-ion and ion-ion interaction physics 13 have been challenging 14 , although recent progress has been made using X-ray absorption spectroscopy 15,16 . Early experiments on fourth-generation light sources 17 have made use of X-ray diffraction and measured the structural evolution from elastic to plastic states 18 . However, pressures in the Mbar regime, as required for melting many solids, have only recently become available at the Matter in Extreme Conditions (MEC) instrument at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS).Here we visualize, for the first time, the evolution of compressed matter across the melting line and the coexistence regime into a WDM state. The combination of high-power optical lasers and the X-ray beam at MEC provides high-resolution X-ray scattering at multi-Mbar pressures. Our data provide the io...
The Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) is an x-ray Free-Electron Laser (FEL) project presently in a commissioning phase at SLAC. We report here on very low emittance measurements made at low bunch charge, and a few femtosecond bunch length produced by the LCLS bunch compressors. Start-to-end simulations associated with these beam parameters show the possibilities of generating hundreds of GW at 1.5Å x-ray wavelength and nearly a single longitudinally spike at 1.5 nm with 2-fs duration.
X-ray free-electron lasers, with pulse durations ranging from a few to several hundred femtoseconds, are uniquely suited for studying atomic, molecular, chemical and biological systems. Characterizing the temporal profiles of these femtosecond X-ray pulses that vary from shot to shot is not only challenging but also important for data interpretation. Here we report the time-resolved measurements of X-ray free-electron lasers by using an X-band radiofrequency transverse deflector at the Linac Coherent Light Source. We demonstrate this method to be a simple, non-invasive technique with a large dynamic range for single-shot electron and X-ray temporal characterization. A resolution of less than 1 fs root mean square has been achieved for soft X-ray pulses. The lasing evolution along the undulator has been studied with the electron trapping being observed as the X-ray peak power approaches 100 GW.
The Linac Coherent Light Source is a SASE x-ray free-electron laser (FEL) project presently under construction at SLAC [J. Arthur et al., SLAC-R-593, 2002.]. The injector section, from drive laser and rf photocathode gun through first bunch compressor chicane, was installed in the fall of 2006. The initial system commissioning with an electron beam was completed in August of 2007, with the goal of a 1.2-micron emittance in a 1-nC bunch demonstrated. The second phase of commissioning, including second bunch compressor and full linac, is planned for 2008, with FEL commissioning in 2009. We report experimental results and experience gained in the first phase of commissioning, including the photocathode drive laser, rf gun, photocathode, S-band and X-band rf systems, first bunch compressor, and the various beam diagnostics.
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