Abstract

Harmonic lasing in a free electron laser with a planar undulator (under the condition that the fundamental frequency is suppressed) might be a cheap and efficient way of extension of wavelength ranges of existing and planned x-ray free electron laser (FEL) facilities. Contrary to nonlinear harmonic generation, harmonic lasing can provide much more intense, stable, and narrow-band FEL beam which is easier to handle due to the suppressed fundamental frequency. In this paper we perform a parametrization of the solution of the eigenvalue equation for lasing at odd harmonics, and present an explicit expression for FEL gain length, taking into account all essential effects. We propose and discuss methods for suppression of the fundamental harmonic. We also suggest a combined use of harmonic lasing and lasing at the retuned fundamental wavelength in order to reduce bandwidth and to increase brilliance of x-ray beam at saturation. Considering 3rd harmonic lasing as a practical example, we come to the conclusion that it is much more robust than usually thought, and can be widely used in the existing or planned x-ray FEL (XFEL) facilities. In particular, Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) after a minor modification can lase to saturation at the 3rd harmonic up to the photon energy of 25--30 keV providing multigigawatt power level and narrow bandwidth. As for the European XFEL, harmonic lasing would allow one to extend operating range (ultimately up to 100 keV), to reduce FEL bandwidth and to increase brilliance, to enable two-color operation for pump-probe experiments, and to provide more flexible operation at different electron energies. Similar improvements can be realized in other x-ray FEL facilities with gap-tunable undulators like FLASH II, SACLA, LCLS II, etc. Harmonic lasing can be an attractive option for compact x-ray FELs (driven by electron beams with a relatively low energy), allowing the use of the standard undulator technology instead of small-gap in-vacuum devices. Finally, in this paper we discover that in a part of the parameter space, corresponding to the operating range of soft x-ray beam lines of x-ray FEL facilities (like SASE3 beam line of the European XFEL), harmonics can grow faster than the fundamental wavelength. This feature can be used in some experiments, but might also be an unwanted phenomenon, and we discuss possible measures to diminish it.

Highlights

  • Successful operation of x-ray free electron lasers (FELs) [1,2,3], based on the self-amplified spontaneous emission (SASE) principle [4], down to an Angstrom regime opens up new horizons for photon science

  • A possible method to suppress the fundamental harmonic without affecting the third harmonic lasing was suggested in [18]: one can use 2=3 phase shifters between undulator modules. That this method is inefficient in the case of a SASE FEL

  • In this paper we perform a parametrization of the solution of the eigenvalue equation for lasing at odd harmonics [7], and present explicit expressions for FEL gain length, optimal beta function, and saturation length taking into account emittance, betatron motion, diffraction of radiation, energy spread, and its growth along the undulator length due to quantum fluctuations of the undulator radiation

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Successful operation of x-ray free electron lasers (FELs) [1,2,3], based on the self-amplified spontaneous emission (SASE) principle [4], down to an Angstrom regime opens up new horizons for photon science. In this paper we perform a parametrization of the solution of the eigenvalue equation for lasing at odd harmonics [7], and present explicit ( approximate) expressions for FEL gain length, optimal beta function, and saturation length taking into account emittance, betatron motion, diffraction of radiation, energy spread, and its growth along the undulator length due to quantum fluctuations of the undulator radiation. We suggest a combined use of harmonic lasing and lasing at the same wavelength with the retuned fundamental mode in order to reduce bandwidth and to increase brilliance of x-ray beam at saturation. In the case of the European x-ray free electron laser (XFEL) [23], the harmonic lasing can allow one to extend the operating range, to reduce FEL bandwidth and increase brilliance, to enable two-color operation for pump-probe experiments, and to provide more flexible operation at different electron energies. Let us mention that the results of this paper can be used for high-gain FELs using external seed (if, for example, the 3rd or the 5th harmonic of the undulator is tuned to the seed frequency)

GAIN LENGTH OF HARMONIC LASING
SIMULTANEOUS LASING
SUPPRESSION OF THE FUNDAMENTAL HARMONIC
Phase shifters
Intraundulator spectral filtering
HARMONICS VERSUS THE RETUNED FUNDAMENTAL MODE
Reduced K
Increased beam energy
Numerical example
Energy spread effects
Fifth and higher harmonics
Discussion on 3D and warm beam effects
PROPERTIES AT SATURATION AND A POSSIBLE INCREASE OF BRILLIANCE
SIMULTANEOUS LASING IN THE CASE OF A THIN ELECTRON BEAM
LCLS: Intraundulator spectral filtering and phase shifters
European XFEL
Other facilities and applications
Possible technical issues
SUMMARY
Findings
Methods
Full Text
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