10 years of pioneering X-ray science at the Free-Electron Laser FLASH at DESY

Publication date: Available online 22 February 2019Source: Physics ReportsAuthor(s): Jörg Rossbach, Jochen R. Schneider, Wilfried WurthAbstractFree-electron lasers produce extremely brief, coherent, and bright laser-like photon pulses that allow to image matter at atomic resolution and at timescales faster than the characteristic atomic motions. In pulses of about 50 femtoseconds duration they provide as many photons as one gets in 1 s from modern storage ring synchrotron radiation facilities. FLASH, the Free-Electron Laser at DESY in Hamburg was the first FEL in the XUV/soft X-ray spectral range, started operation as a user facility in summer 2005, and was for almost 5 years the only short wavelength FEL facility worldwide. Hence, most of the technological developments as well as the scientific experiments performed by the user community were new and unique as outlined below. FLASH was driving FEL science and technology and paved the way for many new ideas. Because of using a linear accelerator in superconducting RF technology FLASH combines the extreme peak brightness characteristic for FELs with very high average brightness. It also was the prototype for the European XFEL located in the Hamburg metropolitan area, which started user operation in summer 2017.The present review provides an overview of the progress made with accelerator science and technology at FLASH for the production of stable beams of well characterized electron pulses, reduction of the pulse jitter to t...
Source: Physics Reports - Category: Physics Source Type: research