Pulsed Laser Injected Enhancement Cavity for Laser-electron Interaction

X-ray diffraction and scattering, X-ray spectroscopy, and X-ray crystallography are widely used in the life sciences, material science, and medical diagnosis. High-quality and high-brightness X-rays are a strong requirement to improve applications. Inverse Compton scattering (ICS) X-ray source has at...

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Main Author: You, Yan
Language:English
Published: Université Paris Sud - Paris XI 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-01011958
http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/01/01/19/58/PDF/VD_YOU_YAN_03062014.pdf
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spelling ndltd-CCSD-oai-tel.archives-ouvertes.fr-tel-010119582014-06-28T03:31:51Z http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-01011958 2014PA112099 http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/01/01/19/58/PDF/VD_YOU_YAN_03062014.pdf Pulsed Laser Injected Enhancement Cavity for Laser-electron Interaction You, Yan [PHYS:COND:CM_GEN] Physics/Condensed Matter/Other [PHYS:COND:CM_GEN] Physique/Matière Condensée/Autre Accelerators Optical resonators X-rays Inverse Compton scattering Laser cavity feedback Fiber laser X-ray diffraction and scattering, X-ray spectroscopy, and X-ray crystallography are widely used in the life sciences, material science, and medical diagnosis. High-quality and high-brightness X-rays are a strong requirement to improve applications. Inverse Compton scattering (ICS) X-ray source has attracted great interests worldwide lately. To significantly enhance the average X-ray photon flux, a compact electron storage-ring combined with a high finesse optical enhancement cavity (OEC) can be utilized. In such a system, the collision rate between the electron beam and the laser pulse is greatly increased to the MHz range, enabling a photon flux up to 10¹³ph/s.In the first chapter, I describe the motivation behind the development of OEC based on ICS X-ray source. The characteristics of this kind of X-ray source are summarized, compared to those of the conventional low-repetition-rate Terawatt laser system based on ICS X-ray source. The latest progress and research status of OEC based on ICS X-ray source are presented. Pulsed-laser injected high-finesse OEC stacking theory and properties are discussed in Chapter 2. Not only does the OEC based on ICS X-ray source require the laser pulse repetition rate to be matched to the free spectral range (FSR) of the cavity, where both also have to match the electron storage-ring circulation frequency. In addition, we have to match the phase shift of the laser repetition rate to the phase offset introduced by the dispersion of the cavity mirrors, since our cavity finesse design value is quite high. The stacking theory is analyzed in the frequency domain. Cavity properties, including cavity mirror dispersion, finesse, and FSR, are discussed in detail. A laser frequency comb and OEC coupling is analyzed also. The laser source development is presented in Chapter 3. We constructed a mode-locked fiber laser based on nonlinear polarization rotation. The locking model, locking techniques, and the theory, simulations and experimental tests of tilt locking (TL) in the pulsed laser injected high-finesse OEC are discussed in Chapter 4. We succeeded in locking a pulsed laser to a high-finesse cavity with the TL technique. The experimental results show that the TL and the Pound-Drever-Hall techniques have the same performance: stable locking, high sensitivity, and the same power coupling rate for picosecond laser pulse case, while the test results for full spectrum TL locking show that it is uneasy to align the split-photodiode to the beam waist.Based on the above experimental study and tests, we design the OEC system for Tsinghua University X-ray project in Chapter 5. The expected X-ray flux is 10¹º to 10¹³ ph/s. We detail every subsystem requirement. 2014-06-03 eng PhD thesis Université Paris Sud - Paris XI
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic [PHYS:COND:CM_GEN] Physics/Condensed Matter/Other
[PHYS:COND:CM_GEN] Physique/Matière Condensée/Autre
Accelerators
Optical resonators
X-rays
Inverse Compton scattering
Laser cavity feedback
Fiber laser
spellingShingle [PHYS:COND:CM_GEN] Physics/Condensed Matter/Other
[PHYS:COND:CM_GEN] Physique/Matière Condensée/Autre
Accelerators
Optical resonators
X-rays
Inverse Compton scattering
Laser cavity feedback
Fiber laser
You, Yan
Pulsed Laser Injected Enhancement Cavity for Laser-electron Interaction
description X-ray diffraction and scattering, X-ray spectroscopy, and X-ray crystallography are widely used in the life sciences, material science, and medical diagnosis. High-quality and high-brightness X-rays are a strong requirement to improve applications. Inverse Compton scattering (ICS) X-ray source has attracted great interests worldwide lately. To significantly enhance the average X-ray photon flux, a compact electron storage-ring combined with a high finesse optical enhancement cavity (OEC) can be utilized. In such a system, the collision rate between the electron beam and the laser pulse is greatly increased to the MHz range, enabling a photon flux up to 10¹³ph/s.In the first chapter, I describe the motivation behind the development of OEC based on ICS X-ray source. The characteristics of this kind of X-ray source are summarized, compared to those of the conventional low-repetition-rate Terawatt laser system based on ICS X-ray source. The latest progress and research status of OEC based on ICS X-ray source are presented. Pulsed-laser injected high-finesse OEC stacking theory and properties are discussed in Chapter 2. Not only does the OEC based on ICS X-ray source require the laser pulse repetition rate to be matched to the free spectral range (FSR) of the cavity, where both also have to match the electron storage-ring circulation frequency. In addition, we have to match the phase shift of the laser repetition rate to the phase offset introduced by the dispersion of the cavity mirrors, since our cavity finesse design value is quite high. The stacking theory is analyzed in the frequency domain. Cavity properties, including cavity mirror dispersion, finesse, and FSR, are discussed in detail. A laser frequency comb and OEC coupling is analyzed also. The laser source development is presented in Chapter 3. We constructed a mode-locked fiber laser based on nonlinear polarization rotation. The locking model, locking techniques, and the theory, simulations and experimental tests of tilt locking (TL) in the pulsed laser injected high-finesse OEC are discussed in Chapter 4. We succeeded in locking a pulsed laser to a high-finesse cavity with the TL technique. The experimental results show that the TL and the Pound-Drever-Hall techniques have the same performance: stable locking, high sensitivity, and the same power coupling rate for picosecond laser pulse case, while the test results for full spectrum TL locking show that it is uneasy to align the split-photodiode to the beam waist.Based on the above experimental study and tests, we design the OEC system for Tsinghua University X-ray project in Chapter 5. The expected X-ray flux is 10¹º to 10¹³ ph/s. We detail every subsystem requirement.
author You, Yan
author_facet You, Yan
author_sort You, Yan
title Pulsed Laser Injected Enhancement Cavity for Laser-electron Interaction
title_short Pulsed Laser Injected Enhancement Cavity for Laser-electron Interaction
title_full Pulsed Laser Injected Enhancement Cavity for Laser-electron Interaction
title_fullStr Pulsed Laser Injected Enhancement Cavity for Laser-electron Interaction
title_full_unstemmed Pulsed Laser Injected Enhancement Cavity for Laser-electron Interaction
title_sort pulsed laser injected enhancement cavity for laser-electron interaction
publisher Université Paris Sud - Paris XI
publishDate 2014
url http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-01011958
http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/01/01/19/58/PDF/VD_YOU_YAN_03062014.pdf
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