A Bright Spatially-Coherent Compact X-ray Synchrotron Source
Abstract
Each successive generation of x-ray machines has opened up new frontiers in science, such as the first radiographs and the determination of the structure of DNA. State-of-the-art x-ray sources can now produce coherent high brightness keV x-rays and promise a new revolution in imaging complex systems on nanometre and femtosecond scales. Despite the demand, only a few dedicated synchrotron facilities exist worldwide, partially due the size and cost of conventional (accelerator) technology. Here we demonstrate the use of a recently developed compact laser-plasma accelerator to produce a well-collimated, spatially-coherent, intrinsically ultrafast source of hard x-rays. This method reduces the size of the synchrotron source from the tens of metres to centimetre scale, accelerating and wiggling a high electron charge simultaneously. This leads to a narrow-energy spread electron beam and x-ray source that is >1000 times brighter than previously reported plasma wiggler and thus has the potential to facilitate a myriad of uses across the whole spectrum of light-source applications.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0912.1812,
title = {A Bright Spatially-Coherent Compact X-ray Synchrotron Source},
author = {S. Kneip and C. McGuffey and J. L. Martins and S. F. Martins and C. Bellei and V. Chvykov and F. Dollar and R. Fonseca and C. Huntington and G. Kalintchenko and A. Maksimchuk and S. P. D. Mangles and T. Matsuoka and S. R. Nagel and C. Palmer and J. Schreiber and K. Ta Phuoc and A. G. R. Thomas and V. Yanovsky and L. O. Silva and K. Krushelnick and Z. Najmudin},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0912.1812},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
5 pages, 4 figures