Abstract

The spectroscopic methods for the ultrafast electronic and structural dynamics of materials require fully coherent extreme ultraviolet and soft X-ray radiation with high-average brightness. Seeded free-electron lasers (FELs) are ideal sources for delivering fully coherent soft X-ray pulses. However, due to state-of-the-art laser system limitations, it is challenging to meet the ultraviolet seed laser’s requirements of sufficient energy modulation and high repetition rates simultaneously. The self-modulation scheme has been proposed and recently demonstrated in a seeded FEL to relax the seed laser requirements. Using numerical simulations, we show that the required seed laser intensity in the self-modulation is ~3 orders of magnitude lower than that in the standard high-gain harmonic generation (HGHG). The harmonic self-modulation can launch a single-stage HGHG FEL lasing at the 30th harmonic of the seed laser. Moreover, the proof-of-principle experimental results confirm that the harmonic self-modulation can still amplify the laser-induced energy modulation. These achievements reveal that the self-modulation can not only remarkably reduce the requirements of the seed laser but also improve the harmonic upconversion efficiency, which paves the way for realizing high-repetition-rate and fully coherent soft X-ray FELs.

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