Publications by authors named "Claudio Emma"

Sources of high-energy photons have important applications in almost all areas of research. However, the photon flux and intensity of existing sources is strongly limited for photon energies above a few hundred keV. Here we show that a high-current ultrarelativistic electron beam interacting with multiple submicrometer-thick conducting foils can undergo strong self-focusing accompanied by efficient emission of gamma-ray synchrotron photons.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study demonstrates the ability to generate powerful X-ray pulses in the 4-8 keV range using the LCLS-II facility, achieving peak power of 0.65 TW and extremely short pulse durations of 15 fs.
  • Second harmonic pulses with high power (8-12 GW) and narrow bandwidth are created using two electron bunches, with one bunch providing a seed signal and the other amplifying it via undulator tapering, ensuring optimal timing through a delay mechanism.
  • These advanced X-ray pulses enable cutting-edge experiments such as single-particle imaging and high-field physics, showcasing their potential impact on various scientific fields.
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The dynamics of intense electron bunches in free electron lasers and plasma wakefield accelerators are dominated by complex collective effects such as wakefields, space charge, coherent synchrotron radiation, and drift unpredictably with time, making it difficult to control and tune beam properties using model-based approaches. We report on a first of its kind combination of automatic, model-independent feedback with a neural network for control of the longitudinal phase space of relativistic electron beams with femtosecond resolution based only on transverse deflecting cavity measurements.

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We demonstrate a novel multistage amplification scheme for self-amplified spontaneous-emission free electron lasers for the production of few femtosecond pulses with very high power in the soft x-ray regime. The scheme uses the fresh-slice technique to produce an x-ray pulse on the bunch tail, subsequently amplified in downstream undulator sections by fresh electrons. With three-stages amplification, x-ray pulses with an energy of hundreds of microjoules are produced in few femtoseconds.

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