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3D Laser pulse shaping for photoinjector applications. Yuelin Li Accelerator Systems Division and X-ray Science Division Argonne National Laboratory ylli@aps.anl.gov. Acknowledgement. K. Harkay, K.-J. Kim, and E. Gluskin for strong support
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3D Laser pulse shaping for photoinjector applications Yuelin Li Accelerator Systems Division and X-ray Science Division Argonne National Laboratoryylli@aps.anl.gov
Acknowledgement • K. Harkay, K.-J. Kim, and E. Gluskin for strong support • J. Lewellen, Y. Sun for discussion and help with GPT simulation • S. Chemrisov for helping with experiments • This work is support by DOE, Office of Basic Science
Outline • The case of pulse shaping: high brightness or low emittance • Thermal/cathode emittance: casted after emission • Emittance growth due to space charge force: can be compensated • Uniform ellipsoidal beam is the key • Pulse shaping techniques • Mechanical: pulse stacking • Physics: self evolving • Phase modulation: • Mechanism • optics and beam simulation • Progress at ANL: A proof of principle experiment • Measurement method • Phase tailoring procedure • Results • Summary
Outline • The case of pulse shaping: high brightness or low emittance • Thermal/cathode emittance: casted after emission • Emittance growth due to space charge force: can be compensated • Uniform ellipsoidal beam is the key • Pulse shaping techniques • Mechanical: pulse stacking • Physics: self evolving • Phase modulation: • Mechanism • optics and beam simulation • Progress at ANL: A proof of principle experiment • Measurement method • Phase tailoring procedure • Results • Summary and acknowledgement
{ The case of pulse shaping • The case of pulse shaping: • Theory of emittance compensation • Emittance growth due to space charge force can be compensated if the space charge force is linear • Carlsten, NIMA 285, 313, (1989) • Serafini and Rosenzweig, PRE 55, 7565 (1997) • Homogeneous ellipsoidal beam is the key • Uniform electron density distribution in a ellipsoid • Has linear space charge force (M. Reiser, Theory and Design of Charged Particle Beams, Wiley, New York.)
Space charge force distribution: three geometries Cylindrical 3D Gaussian H. Ellipsodial
Outline • The case of pulse shaping: high brightness or low emittance • Thermal/cathode emittance: casted after emission • Emittance growth due to space charge force: can be compensated • Uniform ellipsoidal beam is the key • Pulse shaping techniques • Mechanical: pulse stacking • Physics: self evolving • Phase modulation: • Mechanism • optics and beam simulation • Progress at ANL: A proof of principle experiment • Measurement method • Phase tailoring procedure • Results • Summary
Pulse stacking • Excellent for longitudinally flat topped pulse • Interferometer setup • C. Sider, Appl. Opt. 37, 5302 (1998). • Bi-fringence crystals • C. S. Zhou, et al., Applied Optics 46, 1 - 5 (2007). • I.V. Bazarov, D.G. Ouzounov, B.M. Dunham, Phys. Rev. ST AB 11, 040702 (2008). • For uniform ellipsoidal pulse generation: very complicated • First beam simulation by Limborg • C. Limborg-Deprey and P. Bolton, Nucl. Instrum. Methods A 557, 106 (2006). • Design exists, but with low efficiency • H. Tomizawa, private communication).
Self-evolution of the a pancake beam • Pro • Easy: Need a short pulse (100 fs) with initial parabolic transverse distribution, no longi shaping needed • Con • Cannot put too many charges: image charge will distort the beam • Pancake geometry thus larger transverse size: larger cathode emittance to start with • L. Serafini, AIP Conf. Proc. 413, 321 (1997). • O. J. Luiten et al, Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 094802 (2004). • B. J. Claessens, Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 164801 (2005). • J. B. Rosenzweig et al., Nucl. Instrum. Methods A 557, 87 (2006). • P. Musumeci, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 244801 (2008).
Phase: f(w) Amplitude: A(w) Phase: w(t) Amplitude: A(t) Size: r(t) Amplitude: A(t) = Chromatic dispersion Frequency domain Time domain Spatiotemporal Pulse shaping: 3D laser pulse shaping to generate an ellipsoidal beam • Difficulties • Simultaneous evolving longitudinal and transverse profiles • Homogeneous in 3-D • Actually a 2-D problem due to rotation symmetry • Hope: coupling between time and space via chromatic dispersion
Phase tailoring dw t Chromatic dispersion for ellipsoidal pulse Chromatic dispersion + Radius modulation
Can an ellipsoidal pulse be generated? • A EM pulse can be written as • An ellipsoidal pulse • Chromatic Dispersion • Gaussian beam • Therefore Y. Li and J. Lewellen, PRL 100, 078401(2008)
Numerical calculation: Fourier optics method • Full wave optics (Fresnel diffraction) adapted from Kempe et al. (JOSA B 9, 1158 (1992)) • Group velocity dispersion and group velocity delay effect considered up to the second order Kempe et al.,JOSA B 9, 1158 (1992)
The 3D laser pulse at the focal plane of a lens Dw/w=8%, 4%, 2%, 1%, and 0.5%, a0=25 mm, a0=25, 12, 6, 4, and 2 mm, Dw/w=8%, f=150 mm, 249 nm, 12 ps FW Li, Lewellen and Chemerisov, PRSTAB 12, 020702 (2009).
Performance at 1 nC very promising in simulation Emittance Spatiotemporal profile Y. Li and J. Lewellen, PRL 100, 078401(2008) Simulation condition for LCLS from: M. Ferrario et. al., Proc. EPAC 2000, p. 1642.
Outline • The case of pulse shaping: high brightness or low emittance • Thermal/cathode emittance: casted after emission • Emittance growth due to space charge force: can be compensated • Uniform ellipsoidal beam is the key • Pulse shaping techniques • Mechanical: pulse stacking • Physics: self evolving • Phase modulation: • Mechanism • optics and beam simulation • Progress at ANL: A proof of principle experiment • Measurement method • Phase tailoring procedure • Results • Summary
C D AL SF ZSL PP ODL A proof of principle experiment • Experimental setup • 800 nm laser, 1 kHz, 10 nJ per pulse, 40 nm bandwidth • ZnSe lens as the focal lens for high dispersion • 25-mm diameter, 88.9-mm radius of curvature, and 2.9-mm center thickness, Janos Technology, A1204-105, • Dispersion 250 fs2/mm at 800 nm ) • DAZZLER as the phase modulator • Achromatic lens for transport PP: pulse picker; D: AOPDF; SF: achromatic spatial filter; ZSL: ZnSe lens; AL: achromatic image relay lens; ODL: optical delay line; C: camera. Y. Li and S. Chemerisov, Opt. Lett. 33, 1996 (2008); Li, Lewellen and Chemerisov, PRSTAB 12, 020702 (2009).
3D mapping method • The signal recorded on the camera is • If probe is much shorter than the main pulse • Measuring the contrast ratio C(t,r), and integrated probe intensity Ip(r), Interference term Main beam profile at t Y. Li and S. Chemerisov, Opt. Lett. 33, 1996 (2008). Li, Lewellen and Chemerisov, PRSTAB 12, 020702 (2009).
Data processing example Ip Raw Fringe map im
Phase and amplitude modulation viaAcousto-optic Programmable Dispersive Filter (DAZZLER) • A device widely used in laser and optical research • F. Verluise, V. Laude, Z. Cheng, Ch. Spielmann, and P. Tournois, Opt. Lett. 25, 575 (2000). • DAZZLER and similar phase modulation device have been applied to photoinjector related laser pulse shaping for cylindrical pulse • H. Tomizawa et. al., Nucl. Instrum. Methods A 557, 117 (2006). • J. Yang, et al., J. Appl. Phys. 92, 1608 (2002). • S. Cialdi, et al., Appl. Opt. 46, 4959 (2007). UV version available • UV version available • http://fastlite2.siteo.com/en/page15.xml • T. Oksenhendler, CLEO 07 266 nm
Generating the desired phase and amplitude modulation • Calculate the time domain amplitude and phase • Fourier transform for frequency domain for desire spectrum • Take a spectrum of the laser and calculate the spectrum to load to the DAZZLER • Load the spectrum and phase to the DAZZLER Y. Li and S. Chemerisov, Opt. Lett. 33, 1996 (2008).
Results for a Gaussian beam with different aperture size Input beam • Excellent between data and simulation • Work for the future • Demonstration in UV with larger beam • Beam experiment Data Sim Comp Y. Li and S. Chemerisov, Opt. Lett. 33, 1996 (2008). Li, Lewellen and Chemerisov, PRSTAB 12, 020702 (2009).
Effect of residual linear chirp Data • Beam radius: 1/e2 width of 3 mm Sim Comp Li, Lewellen and Chemerisov, PRSTAB 12, 020702 (2009).
Outline • The case of pulse shaping: high brightness or low emittance • Thermal/cathode emittance: casted after emission • Emittance growth due to space charge force: can be compensated • Uniform ellipsoidal beam is the key • Pulse shaping techniques • Mechanical: pulse stacking • Physics: self evolving • Phase modulation: • Mechanism • optics and beam simulation • Progress at ANL: A proof of principle experiment • Measurement method • Phase tailoring procedure • Results • Summary
Summary • Current status • Laser pulse shaping may generate 3D shaped pulses, potentially uniform ellipsoid • A 3D mapping method is developed • Issues • High rep rate and longer pulse duration: longer crystals • Fastlite, private communications • Future plan • Generating a flat topped beam as input • Demonstration in UV • Beam generation