Paper | Title | Page |
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MOOCNO01 | Emittance Control in the Presence of Collective Effects in the FERMI@Elettra Free Electron Laser Linac Driver | 6 |
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Recent beam transport experiments conducted on the the linac driving the FERMI@Elettra free electron laser have provided new insights concerning the transverse emittance degradation due to both coherent synchrotron radiation (CSR) and geometric transverse wakefield (GTW), together with methods to counteract such degradation. For beam charges of several 100's of pC, optics control in a magnetic compressor results to minimize the CSR once the H-function is considered*. We successfully extended this approach to the case of a modified double bend achromat system, opening the door to relatively large bending angles and compact transfer lines**. At the same time, the GTWs excited in few mm diameter iris collimators*** and accelerating structures have been characterized in terms of the induced emittance growth. A model integrating both CSR and GTW effects suggests that there is a limit on the maximum obtainable electron beam brightness in the presence of such collective effects.
* S. Di Mitri et al., PRST-AB 15, 020701 (2012) ** S. Di Mitri et al., PRL 110, 014801 (2013) *** S. Di Mitri et al., PRST-AB 15, 061001 (2012) |
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Slides MOOCNO01 [6.919 MB] | |
MOPSO02 | Measurement of Electron-Beam and Seed Laser Properties Using an Energy Chirped Electron Beam | 24 |
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We present a new method that uses CCD images of the FERMI electron beam at the dump spectrometer after the undulator to determine various electron beam and external seed laser properties. By taking advantage of the correlation between time and electron beam energy for a quasi-linearly chirped electron beam and the fact that the FERMI seed laser pulse (~180 fs) is much shorter than the electron beam duration (~1 ps), measurements of the e-beam pulse length and temporally local energy chirp and current are possible. Moreover, the scheme allows accurate determination of the timing jitter between the electron beam and the seed laser, as well as a measure of the latter's effective pulse length in the FEL undulators. The scheme can be also provide an independent measure of the energy transferred from the electron beam to the FEL output radiation. We describe the proposed method as well as some experimental results obtained at the seeded FERMI FEL. | ||
WEPSO22 | FERMI@Elettra Status Report | 546 |
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Funding: Work supported in part by the Italian Ministry of University and Research under grants FIRB-RBAP045JF2 and FIRB-RBAP06AWK3 In this paper we report about the status of FERMI, the seeded Free Electron Laser located at the Elettra laboratory in Trieste, Italy. The facility welcomed the first external users on FEL-1 between December 2012 and March 2013, operating at wavelengths between 65 and 20 nm. Variable polarization and tunability of the radiation wavelength were widely used. Photon energies attained up to 200 microJoule, depending on the grade of spectral purity requested and on the selected wavelength. Pump-probe experiments were performed, both by double FEL pulses obtained via double pulse seeding of the electron beam and by providing part of the seed laser to the experimental stations as user laser. The FEL-2 line, covering the lower wavelength range between 20 and 4 nm thanks to a double stage cascaded HGHG scheme, operating in the "fresh bunch injection” mode, generated its first coherent photons in October 2012 and has seen further progress during the commissioning phases in 2013, at higher electron beam energy. In fact we will also report on the linac energy increase to 1.5 GeV and on the repetition rate upgrade from 10 to 50 Hz and eventually comment on the FEL operability and uptime. |
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WEPSO67 | Progress with the FERMI Laser Heater Commissioning | 680 |
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FERMI@ELETTRA is a seeded free electron laser facility composed by one linac and two FEL lines named FEL-1 and FEL-2. FEL-1 works in HGHG configuration, while FEL2 is a HGHG cascade implementing "fresh bunch" injection into the second stage. Perfomance of FEL-1 and FEL-2 lines have benefited from the use of the laser heater system, which is located right after the injector, at 100 MeV beam energy. Proper tuning of the laser heater parameters has allowed control of the microbunching instability, which is otherwise expected to degrade the high brightness electron beam quality sufficiently to reduce the FEL power. The laser heater was commissioned one year ago and positive effects upon microbunching instabilities and FEL-1 performance was soon observed. In this work we presents further measurements of microbunching suppression in two compressors scheme showing directly the reduction of beam slice energy spread due to laser heater action. We present measuerements showing the impact of the laser heater on FEL2 | ||
THOANO03 |
Experimental Characterization of the Laser Heater Effects on a Seeded FEL | |
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High brightness electron beams necessary for high gain FEL usually require a laser heater in order to increase the local energy spread in the low energy part of the machine that can mitigate the microbunching instabilities developing in the compressors and in the rest of the linac. Microbunching suppression is essential for FEL operations both in SASE and in seeded mode since it can strongly affect the final electron beam properties. In the case of HGHG, due to the seeding mechanism, the FEL process is extremely sensitive to the amount of energy spread at the undulator entrance, and the FEL output may depend to the amount of heating. In this work we characterize the dependence of the FEL output as a function of the laser heater intensity in the case of FERMI FEL-1. Results also show that for a non Gaussian distribution of the electron beam energy the HGHG may produce significant radiation with an energy spread significantly higher than what expected for a simple Gaussian distribution. | ||
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Slides THOANO03 [2.333 MB] | |
THOCNO04 | Jitter-free Time Resolved Resonant CDI Experiments Using Two-color FEL Pulses Generated by the Same Electron Bunch | 753 |
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The generation of two-color FEL pulses by the same electron bunch at FERMI-FEL has opened unprecedented opportunity for jitter-free FEL pump-FEL probe time resolved coherent diffraction imaging (CDI) experiments in order to access spatial aspects in dynamic processes. This possibility was first explored in proof-of-principle resonant CDI experiments using specially designed sample consisting of Ti grating. The measurements performed tuning the energies of the FEL pulses to the Ti M-absorption edge clearly demonstrated the time dependence of Ti optical constants while varying the FEL-pump intensity and probe time delay. The next planned CDI experiments in 2013 will explore transient states in multicomponent nanostructures and magnetic systems, using the controlled linear or circular polarization of the two-color FEL pulses with temporal resolution in the fs to ps range. | ||
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Slides THOCNO04 [8.778 MB] | |
MOPSO02 | Measurement of Electron-Beam and Seed Laser Properties Using an Energy Chirped Electron Beam | 24 |
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We present a new method that uses CCD images of the FERMI electron beam at the dump spectrometer after the undulator to determine various electron beam and external seed laser properties. By taking advantage of the correlation between time and electron beam energy for a quasi-linearly chirped electron beam and the fact that the FERMI seed laser pulse (~180 fs) is much shorter than the electron beam duration (~1 ps), measurements of the e-beam pulse length and temporally local energy chirp and current are possible. Moreover, the scheme allows accurate determination of the timing jitter between the electron beam and the seed laser, as well as a measure of the latter's effective pulse length in the FEL undulators. The scheme can be also provide an independent measure of the energy transferred from the electron beam to the FEL output radiation. We describe the proposed method as well as some experimental results obtained at the seeded FERMI FEL. | ||