Synchrotron Light Sources and Free-Electron Lasers 2020
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-23201-6_10
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FLASH: The First Superconducting X-Ray Free-Electron Laser

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“…For this, photoelectron sidebands will be used as an example [56]. We will base the discussion on the actual experimental pump-probe photoelectron spectra collected at the CAMP end-station [57,58] of the soft X-ray free-electron laser FLASH (DESY, Hamburg) [59,60] during the beamtime F-20191568. In this experiment, helium (He) atoms were pumped with XUV photons with an energy of hν XUV = 40.8 eV (wavelength λ = 30.3 nm), produced by FLASH, and then probed by infrared (IR) photons with an energy of hν IR = 1.5 eV (λ = 810 nm).…”
Section: Multiple Datasets With Shared Parametersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For this, photoelectron sidebands will be used as an example [56]. We will base the discussion on the actual experimental pump-probe photoelectron spectra collected at the CAMP end-station [57,58] of the soft X-ray free-electron laser FLASH (DESY, Hamburg) [59,60] during the beamtime F-20191568. In this experiment, helium (He) atoms were pumped with XUV photons with an energy of hν XUV = 40.8 eV (wavelength λ = 30.3 nm), produced by FLASH, and then probed by infrared (IR) photons with an energy of hν IR = 1.5 eV (λ = 810 nm).…”
Section: Multiple Datasets With Shared Parametersmentioning
confidence: 99%