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Published in

American Physical Society, Physical Review Special Topics: Accelerators and Beams, 4(17), 2014

DOI: 10.1103/physrevstab.17.040702

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Optical beam transport to a remote location for low jitter pump-probe experiments with a free electron laser

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

In this paper we propose a scheme that allows a strong reduction of the timing jitter between the pulses of a free electron laser (FEL) and external laser pulses delivered simultaneously at the FEL experimental stations for pump-probe–type experiments. The technique, applicable to all seeding-based FEL schemes, relies on the free-space optical transport of a portion of the seed laser pulse from its optical table to the experimental stations. The results presented here demonstrate that a carefully designed laser beam transport, incorporating also a transverse beam position stabilization, allows one to keep the timing fluctuations, added by as much as 150 m of free space propagation and a number of beam folding mirrors, to less than 4 femtoseconds rms. By its nature our scheme removes the major common timing jitter sources, so the overall jitter in pump-probe measurements done in this way will be below 10 fs (with a margin to be lowered to below 5 fs), much better than the best results reported previously in the literature amounting to 33 fs rms.