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Ghost-imaging enhanced SASE x-ray free-electron laser spectral characterization

ORAL

Abstract

X-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs) provide ultrahigh intensity x-ray pulses with brightness 10 orders of magnitude larger than the synchrotron radiation light source. It opens the door of nonlinear light-matter interaction investigation in the x-ray regime. However, most XFELs around the world work in the self-amplified spontaneous radiation (SASE) mode, which starts from initial random bunching within the electron beam and generates spectrally stochastic x-ray pulses. Spectral characterization of the SASE pulses is important for x-ray spectroscopy. For hard x rays crystal Bragg diffraction and for soft x rays grating diffraction have been used to split the x rays and measure a reference spectrum.  Alternatively, the photoelectron spectrum from a dilute gas can act as a transparent beam splitter and the x-ray spectrum can be derived.  In this talk, we will discuss enhanced x-ray spectral characterization from photoelectron spectra using a ghost-imaging method [1]. The SASE pulses at European XFEL are measured by 16 electron time-of-flight (eToF) and a grating spectrometer simultaneously.  A response matrix is learned by comparing the eToF and spectrometer measurements of thousands of SASE pulses. The response matrix extracted can be used to predict yet-to-be-measured SASE pulses with excellent energy resolution.

Publication: [1] K. Li, J. Laksman, T. Mazza, G. Doumy, D. Koulentianos, A. Picchiotti, S. Serkez, N. Rohringer, M. Ilchen, M. Meyer, L. Young, arXiv:2110.10197

Presenters

  • Kai Li

    University of Chicago

Authors

  • Kai Li

    University of Chicago

  • Joakim Laksman

    European XFEL

  • Tommaso Mazza

    European XFEL, EuXFEL

  • Gilles Doumy

    Argonne National Laboratory

  • Dimitris Koulentianos

    Argonne National Laboratory

  • Alessandra Picchiotti

    The Hamburg Centre for Ultrafast Imaging

  • Svitovar Serkez

    European xfel

  • Nina R Rohringer

    DESY

  • Markus Ilchen

    Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY, European XFEL, Holzkoppel 4, 22869 Schenefeld, Germany, DESY, Eu XFEL

  • Michael Meyer

    European XFEL, EuXFEL, Eu XFEL

  • Linda Young

    Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne Nat'l Lab