1. Coherent soft X-ray pulses from an echo-enabled harmonic generation free-electron laser
- Author
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Rebernik Ribič, Primož, Abrami, Alessandro, Badano, Laura, Bossi, Maurizio, Braun, Hans-Heinrich, Bruchon, Niky, Capotondi, Flavio, Castronovo, Davide, Cautero, Marco, Cinquegrana, Paolo, Coreno, Marcello, Couprie, Marie, Cudin, Ivan, Boyanov Danailov, Miltcho, Ninno, Giovanni, Demidovich, Alexander, Mitri, Simone, Diviacco, Bruno, Fawley, William, Feng, Chao, Ferianis, Mario, Ferrari, Eugenio, Foglia, Laura, Frassetto, Fabio, Gaio, Giulio, Garzella, David, Ghaith, Amin, Giacuzzo, Fabio, Giannessi, Luca, Grattoni, Vanessa, Grulja, Sandi, Hemsing, Erik, Iazzourene, Fatma, Kurdi, Gabor, Lonza, Marco, Mahne, Nicola, Malvestuto, Marco, Manfredda, Michele, Masciovecchio, Claudio, Miotti, Paolo, Mirian, Najmeh, Petrov Nikolov, Ivaylo, Penco, Giuseppe, Penn, Gregory, Poletto, Luca, Pop, Mihai, Prat, Eduard, Principi, Emiliano, Raimondi, Lorenzo, Reiche, Sven, Roussel, Eléonore, Sauro, Roberto, Scafuri, Claudio, Sigalotti, Paolo, Spampinati, Simone, Spezzani, Carlo, Sturari, Luca, Svandrlik, Michele, Tanikawa, Takanori, Trovó, Mauro, Veronese, Marco, Vivoda, Davide, Xiang, Dao, Zaccaria, Maurizio, Zangrando, Dino, Zangrando, Marco, and Allaria, Enrico
- Abstract
X-ray free-electron lasers (FELs), which amplify light emitted by a relativistic electron beam, are extending nonlinear optical techniques to shorter wavelengths, adding element specificity by exciting and probing electronic transitions from core levels. These techniques would benefit tremendously from having a stable FEL source, generating spectrally pure and wavelength-tunable pulses. We show that such requirements can be met by operating the FEL in the so-called echo-enabled harmonic generation (EEHG) configuration. Here, two external conventional lasers are used to precisely tailor the longitudinal phase space of the electron beam before emission of X-rays. We demonstrate high-gain EEHG lasing producing stable, intense, nearly fully coherent pulses at wavelengths as short as 5.9 nm (~211 eV) at the FERMI FEL user facility. Low sensitivity to electron-beam imperfections and observation of stable, narrow-band, coherent emission down to 2.6 nm (~474 eV) make the technique a prime candidate for generating laser-like pulses in the X-ray spectral region, opening the door to multidimensional coherent spectroscopies at short wavelengths. Echo-enabled harmonic generation in a free-electron laser enables 45th harmonic pulses from a 264 nm wavelength seed, yielding 5.9 nm wavelength coherent output.
- Published
- 2019
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