학술논문

Coherent infrared radiation from the ALS generated via femtosecond laser modulation of the electron beam
Document Type
Conference
Author
Source
Conference: 9th Biennial European Particle Accelerator Conference, EPAC'04, Lucerne (CH), 07/05/2004--07/09/2004; Other Information: PBD: 1 Jul 2004
Subject
43 PARTICLE ACCELERATORS
70 PLASMA PHYSICS AND FUSION TECHNOLOGY ACCELERATORS
ALIGNMENT
ELECTRON BEAMS
ELECTRONS
INFRARED RADIATION
INSTABILITY
LASERS
MODULATION
MONITORS
SPECTRA
STORAGE RINGS
TRAJECTORIES
TUNING
Language
English
Abstract
Interaction of an electron beam with a femtosecond laser pulse co-propagating through a wiggler at the ALS produces large modulation of the electron energies within a short {approx}100 fs slice of the electron bunch. Propagating around the storage ring, this bunch develops a longitudinal density perturbation due to the dispersion of electron trajectories. The length of the perturbation evolves with a distance from the wiggler but is much shorter than the electron bunch length. This perturbation causes the electron bunch to emit short pulses of temporally and spatially coherent infrared light which are automatically synchronized to the modulating laser. The intensity and spectra of the infrared light were measured in two storage ring locations for a nominal ALS lattice and for an experimental lattice with the higher momentum compaction factor. The onset of instability stimulated by laser e-beam interaction had been discovered. The infrared signal is now routinely used as a sensitive monitor for a fine tuning of the laser beam alignment during data accumulation in the experiments with femtosecond x-ray pulses.