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Citation counts use data from CrossRef as provided by the publishers of the citing articles.
❖ 2005 and later content is hosted outside of PROLA.
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M. Cornacchia, S. Di Mitri, G. Penco, and A. A. Zholents
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Specific requirements for the electron beam in harmonic cascade-free electron lasers, together with means to produce such beams, are presented. All results are illustrated with simulations and particle tracking studies.
Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 9, 120701 (2006)
Cited 2 times
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2.
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P. Emma, K. Bane, M. Cornacchia, Z. Huang, H. Schlarb, G. Stupakov, and D. Walz
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We propose a novel method to generate femtosecond and subfemtosecond photon pulses in a free-electron laser by selectively spoiling the transverse emittance of the electron beam. Its merits are simplicity and ease of implementation. When the system is applied to the Linac Coherent Light Source, it can provide x-ray pulses the order of 1 fs in duration containing about 1010 transversely coherent photons.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 074801 (2004)
Cited 9 times
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A. Murokh et al.
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VISA (Visible to Infrared SASE Amplifier) is a high-gain self-amplified spontaneous emission (SASE) free-electron laser (FEL), which achieved saturation at 840 nm within a single-pass 4-m undulator. The experiment was performed at the Accelerator Test Facility at BNL, using a high brightness 70-MeV electron beam. A gain length shorter than 18 cm has been obtained, yielding a total gain of 2×108 at saturation. The FEL performance, including the spectral, angular, and statistical properties of SASE radiation, has been characterized for different electron beam conditions. Results are compared to the three-dimensional SASE FEL theory and start-to-end numerical simulations of the entire injector, transport, and FEL systems. An agreement between simulations and experimental results has been obtained at an unprecedented level of detail.
Phys. Rev. E 67, 066501 (2003)
Cited 4 times
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4.
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A. Tremaine, X. J. Wang, M. Babzien, I. Ben-Zvi, M. Cornacchia, A. Murokh, H.-D. Nuhn, R. Malone, C. Pellegrini, S. Reiche, J. Rosenzweig, J. Skaritka, and V. Yakimenko
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Electron beam microbunching in both the fundamental and second harmonic in a high-gain self-amplified spontaneous emission free-electron laser (SASE FEL) was experimentally characterized using coherent transition radiation. The microbunching factors for both modes (b1 and b2) approach unity, an indication of FEL saturation. These measurements are compared to the predictions of FEL simulations. The simultaneous capture of the microbunching and SASE radiation for individual micropulses correlate the longitudinal electron beam structure with the FEL gain.
Phys. Rev. E 66, 036503 (2002)
Cited 2 times
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5.
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M. Cornacchia and P. Emma
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A scheme is proposed to exchange the transverse and longitudinal emittances of an electron bunch. A general analysis is presented and a specific beam line is used as an example where the emittance exchange is achieved by placing a transverse deflecting mode radio-frequency cavity in a magnetic chicane. In addition to reducing the transverse emittance, the bunch length is also simultaneously compressed. The scheme has the potential to introduce an added flexibility to the control of electron beams and to provide some contingency for the achievement of emittance and peak-current goals in free-electron lasers.
Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 5, 084001 (2002)
Cited 2 times
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A. Tremaine, X. J. Wang, M. Babzien, I. Ben-Zvi, M. Cornacchia, H.-D. Nuhn, R. Malone, A. Murokh, C. Pellegrini, S. Reiche, J. Rosenzweig, and V. Yakimenko
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Nonlinear harmonic radiation was observed using the VISA self-amplified, spontaneous emission (SASE) free-electron laser (FEL) at saturation. The gain lengths, spectra, and energies of the three lowest SASE FEL modes were experimentally characterized. The measured nonlinear harmonic gain lengths and center spectral wavelengths decrease with harmonic number, n, which is consistent with nonlinear harmonic theory. Both the second and third nonlinear harmonics energies are about 1% of the fundamental energy. These experimental results demonstrate for the first time the feasibility of using nonlinear harmonic SASE FEL radiation to produce coherent, femtosecond x rays.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 88, 204801 (2002)
Cited 21 times
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7.
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Roger Carr, Max Cornacchia, Paul Emma, Heinz-Dieter Nuhn, Ben Poling, Robert Ruland, Erik Johnson, George Rakowsky, John Skaritka, Steve Lidia, Pat Duffy, Marcus Libkind, Pedro Frigola, Alex Murokh, Claudio Pellegrini, James Rosenzweig, and Aaron Tremaine
Show Abstract
The visible-infrared self-amplified spontaneous emission amplifier (VISA) free electron laser (FEL) is an experimental device designed to show self-amplified spontaneous emission (SASE) to saturation in the near infrared to visible light energy range. It generates a resonant wavelength output from 800–600 nm, so that silicon detectors may be used to characterize the optical properties of the FEL radiation. VISA is designed to show how SASE FEL theory corresponds with experiment in this wavelength range, using an electron beam with emittance close to that planned for the future Linear Coherent Light Source at SLAC. VISA comprises a 4 m pure permanent magnet undulator with four 99 cm segments, each of 55 periods, 18 mm long. The undulator has distributed focusing built into it, to reduce the average beta function of the 70–85 MeV electron beam to about 30 cm. There are four FODO cells per segment. The permanent magnet focusing lattice consists of blocks mounted on either side of the electron beam, in the undulator gap. The most important undulator error parameter for a free electron laser is the trajectory walk-off, or lack of overlap of the photon and electron beams. Using pulsed wire magnet measurements and magnet shimming, we were able to control trajectory walk-off to less than ±50 μm per field gain length.
Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 4, 122402 (2001)
Cited 4 times
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