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Phase locking in an infrared short-pulse free-electron laser

Authors :
D. Oepts
W.B. Colson
Source :
Ieee Journal of Quantum Electronics, 26, 723-730
Publication Year :
1990

Abstract

The article of record as published may be found at https://doi.org/The article of record as published may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/3.53390 In a free-electron laser operating in the infrared and far-infrared spectral regions and using a radio-frequency accelerator for the electron beam, the electron pulse length can be of the same order as the slippage length or even shorter. Such a laser emits short pulses of multimode broad-band radiation. If the repetition time of the electron pulses is short compared to the round-trip time of an optical pulse in the resonator cavity, then phase locking between successive optical pulses can be induced by an intracavity interferometric device. This causes a reduction of the number of active cavity modes, and leads to a significant increase in the power per mode. External selection of a single mode with reasonable power then becomes possible. The feasibility of the phase-locking procedure has been tested by simulation of the optical pulse evolution in a short-pulse free-electron laser, using a model based on the self-consistent solution of the equations of motion for the electrons and the wave equation driven by single-particle currents. The simulations show that a high degree of coherence between successive pulses can be induced by a low-finesse etalon. Not Available

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ieee Journal of Quantum Electronics, 26, 723-730
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....17119d8408fbf40875e0bd606c0fe535