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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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P. Emma, Z. Huang, K.-J. Kim, and P. Piot
Show Abstract
The ability to generate small transverse emittance is perhaps the main limiting factor for the performance of high-gain x-ray free-electron lasers (FELs). Noting that beams from an rf photocathode gun can have energy spread much smaller than required for efficient FEL interaction, we present a method to produce normalized transverse emittance at or below about 0.1 μm, which will lead to a significantly shorter length undulator as well as a lower electron beam energy for an x-ray FEL project. The beam manipulation consists of producing an unequal partition of the initially equal emittances into two dissimilar emittances by a flat-beam technique and exchanging the larger transverse emittance with a smaller longitudinal emittance. We study various issues involved in the manipulation. In particular, a new emittance exchange optics we found enables an exact emittance exchange necessary for this scheme.
Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 9, 100702 (2006)
Cited 5 times
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2.
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D. Mihalcea, C. L. Bohn, U. Happek, and P. Piot
Show Abstract
The longitudinal charge distribution of electron bunches in the Fermilab/NICADD photoinjector was determined using the coherent transition radiation produced by electrons passing through a thin metallic foil. The autocorrelation of the transition radiation signal was measured with a Michelson-type interferometer. The response function of the interferometer was determined from measured and simulated intensity spectra for low electron bunch charge and maximum longitudinal compression. Both pyroelectric and Golay detectors were used for these measurements. A Kramers-Kronig technique was used to determine longitudinal charge distribution. Measurements were performed for electron bunch lengths in the range from 0.3 to 2 ps (rms). To test the accuracy of this interferometric method, the longitudinal charge distribution was measured for double-peaked electron bunches with known distance between the two pulses. The agreement between measured bunch length and simulation is within 30%.
Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 9, 082801 (2006)
Cited 1 times
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3.
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P. Piot, R. Tikhoplav, D. Mihalcea, and N. Barov
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We have developed a two-macroparticle bunch to explore the longitudinal beam dynamics through various components of the Fermilab/NICADD photoinjector. Such a two-macroparticle bunch is generated by splitting the ultraviolet pulse from the photocathode drive laser. The presented method allows the exploration of radio-frequency-induced compression in the 1.625 cell radio frequency gun and the booster cavity. It also allows a direct measurement of the momentum compaction of the magnetic bunch compressor. The measurements are compared with analytical and numerical models.
Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 9, 053501 (2006)
Cited 1 times
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4.
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P. Piot, Y.-E Sun, and K.-J. Kim
Show Abstract
The generation of a flat electron beam directly from a photoinjector is an attractive alternative to the electron damping ring as envisioned for linear colliders. It also has potential applications to light sources such as the generation of ultrashort x-ray pulses or Smith-Purcell free electron lasers. In this paper, we report on the experimental generation of a flat beam with a measured transverse emittance ratio of 100±20 for a bunch charge of ∼0.5 nC; the smaller measured normalized root-mean-square emittance is ∼0.4 μm and is limited by the resolution of our experimental setup. The experimental data, obtained at the Fermilab/NICADD Photoinjector Laboratory, are compared with numerical simulations and the expected scaling laws.
Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 9, 031001 (2006)
Cited 6 times
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5.
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Y.-E Sun, P. Piot, K.-J. Kim, N. Barov, S. Lidia, J. Santucci, R. Tikhoplav, and J. Wennerberg
Show Abstract
Various projects under study require an angular-momentum-dominated electron beam generated by a photoinjector. Some of the proposals directly use the angular-momentum-dominated beams (e.g., electron cooling of heavy ions), while others require the beam to be transformed into a flat beam (e.g., possible electron injectors for light sources and linear colliders). In this paper we report our experimental study of an angular-momentum-dominated beam produced in a photoinjector, addressing the dependencies of angular momentum on initial conditions. We also briefly discuss the removal of angular momentum. The results of the experiment, carried out at the Fermilab/NICADD Photoinjector Laboratory, are found to be in good agreement with theoretical and numerical models.
Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 7, 123501 (2004)
Cited 5 times
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6.
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P. Piot, L. Carr, W. S. Graves, and H. Loos
Show Abstract
We present an experimental evidence of a bunch compression scheme that uses a traveling wave accelerating structure as a compressor. The bunch length issued from a laser-driven radio-frequency electron source was compressed by a factor >3 using an S-band traveling wave structure located immediately downstream from the electron source. Experimental data are found to be in good agreement with particle tracking simulations.
Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 6, 033503 (2003)
Cited 3 times
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7.
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P. Piot, D. R. Douglas, and G. A. Krafft
Show Abstract
Energy recovering an electron beam after it has participated in a free-electron laser (FEL) interaction can be quite challenging because of the substantial FEL-induced energy spread and the energy antidamping that occurs during deceleration. In the Jefferson Lab infrared FEL driver accelerator, such an energy recovery scheme was implemented by properly matching the longitudinal phase space throughout the recirculation transport by employing the so-called energy compression scheme. In the present paper, after presenting a single-particle dynamics approach of the method used to energy recover the electron beam, we report on experimental validation of the method obtained by measurements of the so-called “compression efficiency” and “momentum compaction” lattice transfer maps at different locations in the recirculation transport line. We also compare these measurements with numerical tracking simulations.
Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 6, 030702 (2003)
Cited 2 times
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8.
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V. Ayvazyan et al.
Show Abstract
Experimental results are presented from vacuum-ultraviolet free-electron laser (FEL) operating in the self-amplified spontaneous emission (SASE) mode. The generation of ultrashort radiation pulses became possible due to specific tailoring of the bunch charge distribution. A complete characterization of the linear and nonlinear modes of the SASE FEL operation was performed. At saturation the FEL produces ultrashort pulses (30–100 fs FWHM) with a peak radiation power in the GW level and with full transverse coherence. The wavelength was tuned in the range of 95–105 nm.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 88, 104802 (2002)
Cited 85 times
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9.
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J. Andruszkow et al.
Show Abstract
We present the first observation of self-amplified spontaneous emission (SASE) in a free-electron laser (FEL) in the vacuum ultraviolet regime at 109 nm wavelength (11 eV). The observed free-electron laser gain (approximately 3000) and the radiation characteristics, such as dependency on bunch charge, angular distribution, spectral width, and intensity fluctuations, are all consistent with the present models for SASE FELs.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 85, 3825 (2000)
Cited 89 times
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10.
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G. R. Neil, C. L. Bohn, S. V. Benson, G. Biallas, D. Douglas, H. F. Dylla, R. Evans, J. Fugitt, A. Grippo, J. Gubeli, R. Hill, K. Jordan, G. A. Krafft, R. Li, L. Merminga, P. Piot, J. Preble, M. Shinn, T. Siggins, R. Walker, and B. Yunn
No abstract available.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 5238 (2000)
Cited 0 times
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11.
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G. R. Neil, C. L. Bohn, S. V. Benson, G. Biallas, D. Douglas, H. F. Dylla, R. Evans, J. Fugitt, A. Grippo, J. Gubeli, R. Hill, K. Jordan, R. Li, L. Merminga, P. Piot, J. Preble, M. Shinn, T. Siggins, R. Walker, and B. Yunn
Show Abstract
Jefferson Laboratory's kW-level infrared free-electron laser utilizes a superconducting accelerator that recovers about 75% of the electron-beam power. In achieving first lasing, the accelerator operated “straight ahead” to deliver 38-MeV, 1.1-mA cw current for lasing near 5 μm. The waste beam was sent directly to a dump while producing stable operation at up to 311 W. Utilizing the recirculation loop to send the electron beam back to the linac for energy recovery, the machine has now recovered cw average currents up to 5 mA, and has lased cw with up to 1720 W output at 3.1 μm.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 662 (2000)
Cited 38 times
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