Robles, River
Leveraging the capabilities of LCLS-II: linking adaptable photoinjector laser shaping to tailored X-ray production
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SLAC’s LCLS-II is pioneering high-repetition-rate attosecond X-ray science, enabling new opportunities to optimize X-ray generation by controlling the electron beam at its source—the photoinjector. LCLS-II employs a 20 ps Gaussian UV laser pulse to drive the photocathode, with an added narrow modulation to induce microbunching for extended modes. Recent advances in laser pulse shaping and frequency upconversion now allow for more sophisticated tailoring of the electron beam at the injector. We present a novel approach using spectral amplitude and phase shaping of the IR laser, followed by dispersion-controlled nonlinear synthesis—relying on phase-modulated noncollinear sum-frequency generation—for UV upconversion. This enables diverse UV temporal profiles, including flattop and double/triple spikes, offering new degrees of freedom for shaping. Preliminary results from LCLS-II beam time show these modulations produce effective downstream perturbations to the electron bunch at the undulators, demonstrating feasibility for programmable bunch formation. We are integrating this shaping into a start-to-end simulation framework, enabling digital twin modeling of the XFEL chain—from photoinjector laser to X-ray output—laying the groundwork for fully tunable, end-to-end optimized, application-specific X-ray pulses.
SUP013
Measurements of single-shot attosecond X-ray pulses at high repetition rate
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Electron dynamics in molecules occur on attosecond timescales and drive fundamental processes such as photosynthesis, catalysis, and chemical bond transformations. Understanding these phenomena requires tools with both high temporal resolution and the capability to probe molecular dynamics at high repetition rates. Here, we present the first single-shot measurements of attosecond soft x-ray pulses at the superconducting LCLS-II accelerator. Using an angle-resolving electron time-of-flight spectrometer, we perform angular streaking measurements with high energy and angular resolution, enabling a complete reconstruction of the spatial and temporal profiles of the pulses. These measurements showcase the attosecond science capabilities of LCLS-II at unprecedented repetition rates and provide the foundation for controlling and shaping x-ray pulses to study ultrafast dynamics in complex systems with precision.
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-NAPAC2025-THP052
About: Received: 08 Aug 2025 — Revised: 08 Aug 2025 — Accepted: 09 Aug 2025 — Issue date: 28 Jan 2026
Single spike hard x-ray free-electron laser pulses generated by photocathode laser shaping
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We report the generation of single spike hard x-ray pulses at the Linac Coherent Light Source enabled by temporal shaping of the photocathode laser. The pulses were produced with typical pulse energies of 10 uJ and full-width at half-maximum spectral bandwidths averaging 30 eV, corresponding to a 60 attosecond Fourier-limited pulse duration. These pulses open new doors in electronic-damage-free probing of ultrafast phenomena and, eventually, attosecond hard x-ray scattering experiments. We discuss progress towards characterization of the pulses in the time domain using hard x-ray angular streaking and a hard x-ray split and delay device.
Electron beam current spike formation for short pulse generation with two lasers
Formation of current spike in electron bunch has direct implication for attosecond pulse generation in XFEL. In this paper, we present start-to-end simulation for tunable, short current spike generation in the LCLS copper linac using photocathode laser shaping. Our approach uses two stacked laser pulses—a long and a short pulse—to imprint a small modulation in the electron bunch as it is created in the injector. This initial modulation is then amplified as the bunch travels through the downstream bunch compressors, ultimately forming a sharp current spike. We also discuss how different shapes of the initial laser pulses influence the final current profile and the efficiency of spike generation.
Experimental generation of petawatt peak power, extreme electron beams for advanced accelerator applications
In this contribution we report on the experimental generation of high energy (10 GeV), ultra-short (fs-duration), ultra-high current (∼ 0.1 MA), petawatt peak power electron beams at the FACET-II National User Facility at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. These extreme beams enable the exploration of a new frontier of high intensity beam-light and beam-matter interactions broadly relevant across fields ranging from high-field plasma wakefield acceleration to laboratory astrophysics and strong field quantum electrodynamics. We demonstrate our ability to generate and control the properties of these electron beams by means of a laser-electron beam shaping technique. This experimental demonstration opens the door to on-the-fly customization of extreme beam current profiles for desired experiments and is poised to benefit a broad swathe of cross-cutting applications of relativistic electron beams including optimization of advanced accelerator applications.
THP007
Analytical model for the transition to superradiance in seeded free-electron lasers
950
Free-electron lasers (FEL) seeded by short radiation pulses can exhibit superradiant behavior. In the superradiant regime, the pulse simultaneously compresses and amplifies as it propagates through the FEL, making superradiance very promising for pushing the performance limits of attosecond x-ray FELs. To date, this regime has been studied in asymptotic limits, but there is no model for how the initially linear dynamics of the seeded FEL transition into the nonlinear superradiant behavior. We derive an analytical model for the 1D FEL seeded by a short pulse which accurately captures the linear dynamics, the nonlinear superradiant evolution, and the smooth transition between them. Our model fills a critical gap in our understanding of FEL superradiance and nonlinear time-dependent FEL physics more broadly, and may provide a bridge to the corresponding problem in three-dimensions, and analogous problems in other fields exhibiting soliton behavior.
Paper: THP007
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-NAPAC2025-THP007
About: Received: 08 Aug 2025 — Revised: 12 Aug 2025 — Accepted: 13 Aug 2025 — Issue date: 28 Jan 2026
THP027
Development of the rocking curve imaging setup at BL17-2 at SSRL
1004
We report on the implementation of the rocking curve imaging setup with a silicon (111) channel-cut crystal beam expander at Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Light source (SSRL) B17-2. B17-2 is a high-brightness, in-vacuum undulator (IVU) hard X-ray (~5 – 18 keV) beamline optimized for material scattering applications. Recently, we utilized it to perform rocking curve imaging (RCI) of diamond and silicon crystals. The expander is installed in addition to the previously existing RCI optics setup. We achieved horizontal beam magnifications of up to 1.38x at 6.951 keV and 2.25x at 9.831 keV. This work presents the updated RCI setup and experimental results to validate the performance of the Si (111) expander. Future improvements to the setup are also mentioned.
Paper: THP027
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-NAPAC2025-THP027
About: Received: 11 Aug 2025 — Revised: 26 Aug 2025 — Accepted: 26 Aug 2025 — Issue date: 28 Jan 2026
Leveraging the capabilities of LCLS-II: linking adaptable photoinjector laser shaping to tailored X-ray production
SLAC’s LCLS-II is pioneering high-repetition-rate attosecond X-ray science, enabling new opportunities to optimize X-ray generation by controlling the electron beam at its source—the photoinjector. LCLS-II employs a 20 ps Gaussian UV laser pulse to drive the photocathode, with an added narrow modulation to induce microbunching for extended modes. Recent advances in laser pulse shaping and frequency upconversion now allow for more sophisticated tailoring of the electron beam at the injector. We present a novel approach using spectral amplitude and phase shaping of the IR laser, followed by dispersion-controlled nonlinear synthesis—relying on phase-modulated noncollinear sum-frequency generation—for UV upconversion. This enables diverse UV temporal profiles, including flattop and double/triple spikes, offering new degrees of freedom for shaping. Preliminary results from LCLS-II beam time show these modulations produce effective downstream perturbations to the electron bunch at the undulators, demonstrating feasibility for programmable bunch formation. We are integrating this shaping into a start-to-end simulation framework, enabling digital twin modeling of the XFEL chain—from photoinjector laser to X-ray output—laying the groundwork for fully tunable, end-to-end optimized, application-specific X-ray pulses.
THP052
Measurements of single-shot attosecond X-ray pulses at high repetition rate
1055
Electron dynamics in molecules occur on attosecond timescales and drive fundamental processes such as photosynthesis, catalysis, and chemical bond transformations. Understanding these phenomena requires tools with both high temporal resolution and the capability to probe molecular dynamics at high repetition rates. Here, we present the first single-shot measurements of attosecond soft x-ray pulses at the superconducting LCLS-II accelerator. Using an angle-resolving electron time-of-flight spectrometer, we perform angular streaking measurements with high energy and angular resolution, enabling a complete reconstruction of the spatial and temporal profiles of the pulses. These measurements showcase the attosecond science capabilities of LCLS-II at unprecedented repetition rates and provide the foundation for controlling and shaping x-ray pulses to study ultrafast dynamics in complex systems with precision.
Paper: THP052
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-NAPAC2025-THP052
About: Received: 08 Aug 2025 — Revised: 08 Aug 2025 — Accepted: 09 Aug 2025 — Issue date: 28 Jan 2026
Single spike hard x-ray free-electron laser pulses generated by photocathode laser shaping
We report the generation of single spike hard x-ray pulses at the Linac Coherent Light Source enabled by temporal shaping of the photocathode laser. The pulses were produced with typical pulse energies of 10 uJ and full-width at half-maximum spectral bandwidths averaging 30 eV, corresponding to a 60 attosecond Fourier-limited pulse duration. These pulses open new doors in electronic-damage-free probing of ultrafast phenomena and, eventually, attosecond hard x-ray scattering experiments. We discuss progress towards characterization of the pulses in the time domain using hard x-ray angular streaking and a hard x-ray split and delay device.
Spectrotemporal shaping of attosecond x-ray free-electron laser pulses
X-ray free-electron lasers have opened new frontiers in attosecond science thanks to their high pulse energy compared to traditional table top sources. To date, most attosecond experiments performed at XFELs have been impulsive, with the impinging x-ray pulses being much shorter than the timescales being studied. We present a method for attosecond pulse shaping which enables us to move beyond simple observation of ultrafast dynamics towards coherent control of quantum systems on sub-femtosecond timescales. We present experimental evidence of phase locked attosecond pulse trains from the LCLS-II. We conclude by presenting recent experiments utilizing mutually coherent pulse pairs with controllable temporal and spectral delay to launch controllable coherent electronic wavepackets in molecular systems.