Polarized Positron 2011

Polarized Positron 2011

Author: Wei Gai

Publisher: World Scientific

Published: 2012-10-05

Total Pages: 167

ISBN-13: 981440103X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This volume is a collection of the contributions to the 6th Annual Workshop on Polarized Positron in China. It provides an important updated to couple Linear Collider (ILC+CLIC) aimed polarized positron source R&D efforts to more general polarized positron related community with the aim of advancing polarized positron studies through exchanges and collaborations. The topics covered include: positron beams for linear colliders, but not limited to it, with the main items listed below: Polarized gamma ray generation High degree Polarized positron generation from compton scattering both ring and linac based High degree polarized positron generation from undulator radiation Stacking and accumulation of the polarized beam from compton regime Polarized beam transport, control and acceleration Channelling radiation and applications Physics applications of polarized positrons Various high intensity positron sources (include conventional) For other future colliders (SuperB for example) Positron generation target issues Physics applications of high quality X-rays and gamma rays Polarimetry at the e+ source The positron capture section and the photon collimation Review the activities of the "ILC CLIC e+ generation" working group for all schemes Status of the CDR for CLIC and TDR for ILC Polarized electron sources


Polarized Positron 2011 - Proceedings Of The 6th Annual Workshop

Polarized Positron 2011 - Proceedings Of The 6th Annual Workshop

Author: Wei Gai

Publisher: World Scientific

Published: 2012-10-05

Total Pages: 167

ISBN-13: 9814401056

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This volume is a collection of the contributions to the 6th Annual Workshop on Polarized Positron held in China. It provides updated information on polarized positron source R&D efforts for future high energy linear colliders and other research activities related to the polarized positron studies.The topics covered include: positron beams for linear colliders, but not limited to it, with the main items listed below:


Ultrashort X-ray Pulse Science

Ultrashort X-ray Pulse Science

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 135

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

A variety of phenomena involves atomic motion on the femtosecond time-scale. These phenomena have been studied using ultrashort optical pulses, which indirectly probe atomic positions through changes in optical properties. Because x-rays can more directly probe atomic positions, ultrashort x-ray pulses are better suited for the study of ultrafast structural dynamics. One approach towards generating ultrashort x-ray pulses is by 90{sup o} Thomson scattering between terawatt laser pulses and relativistic electrons. Using this technique, the author generated (almost equal to) 300 fs, 30 keV (0.4 Å) x-ray pulses. These x-ray pulses are absolutely synchronized with ultrashort laser pulses, allowing femtosecond optical pump/x-ray probe experiments to be performed. Using the right-angle Thomson scattering x-ray source, the author performed time-resolved x-ray diffraction studies of laser-perturbated InSb. These experiments revealed a delayed onset of lattice expansion. This delay is due to the energy relaxation from a dense electron-hole plasma to the lattice. The dense electron-hole plasma first undergoes Auger recombination, which reduces the carrier concentration while maintaining energy content. Longitudinal-optic (LO) phonon emission then couples energy to the lattice. LO phonon decay into acoustic phonons, and acoustic phonon propagation then causes the growth of a thermally expanded layer. Source characterization is instrumental in utilizing ultrashort x-ray pulses in time-resolved x-ray spectroscopies. By measurement of the electron beam diameter at the generation point, the pulse duration of the Thomson scattered x-rays is determined. Analysis of the Thomson scattered x-ray beam properties also provides a novel means of electron bunch characterization. Although the pulse duration is inferred for the Thomson scattering x-ray source, direct measurement is required for other x-ray pulse sources. A method based on the laser-assisted photoelectric effect (LAPE) has been demonstrated as a means of measuring ultrashort x-ray pulse durations. LAPE may also serve as the basis for a gated x-ray detector.


Enhancement Cavities for the Generation of Extreme Ultraviolet and Hard X-Ray Radiation

Enhancement Cavities for the Generation of Extreme Ultraviolet and Hard X-Ray Radiation

Author: Henning Carstens

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2018-06-22

Total Pages: 103

ISBN-13: 3319940090

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This thesis discusses the power scaling of ultrashort pulses in enhancement cavities, utilized in particular for frequency conversion processes, such as Thomson scattering and high-harmonic generation. Using custom optics for ultrashort-pulse enhancement cavities, it demonstrates for the first time that at the envisaged power levels, the mitigation of thermal effects becomes indispensable even in cavities comprising solely reflective optics. It also studies cavities with large beams, albeit with low misalignment sensitivity, as a way to circumvent intensity-induced mirror damage. Average powers of several hundred kilowatts are demonstrated, which benefit hard x-ray sources based on Thomson scattering. Furthermore, pulses as short as 30 fs were obtained at more than 10 kW of average power and employed for high-harmonic generation with photon energies exceeding 100 eV at 250 MHz repetition rate, paving the way for frequency comb spectroscopy in this spectral region.


T-REX

T-REX

Author: C. P. Barty

Publisher:

Published: 2004

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The scattering of laser photons from relativistic electrons (Thomson scattering) has been demonstrated to be a viable method for the production of ultrashort-duration pulses of tunable radiation in the 10-keV to 100-keV range. Photons in this range are capable of exciting or ionizing even the most tightly bound of atomic electrons. A wide variety of atomistic scale applications are possible. For example, Thomson x-ray sources have been constructed at LLNL (PLEIADES) and LBL as picosecond, stroboscopic probes of atomic-scale dynamics and at Vanderbilt University as element-specific tools for medical radiography and radiology. While these sources have demonstrated an attractive ability to simultaneously probe on an atomic spatial and temporal scale, they do not necessarily exploit the full potential of the Thomson scattering process to produce high-brightness, high-energy photons. In this white paper, we suggest that the peak brightness of Thomson sources can scale as fast as the 4th power of electron beam energy and that production via Thomson scattering of quasi-monochromatic, tunable radiation in the ''nuclear-range'' between 100-keV and several MeV is potentially a much more attractive application space for this process. Traditional sources in this regime are inherently ultra-broadband and decline rapidly in brightness as a function of photon energy. The output from dedicated, national-laboratory-scale, synchrotron facilities, e.g. APS, SPring8, ESRF etc., declines by more than 10 orders from 100 keV to 1 MeV. At 1 MeV, we conservatively estimate that Thomson-source, peak brightness can exceed that of APS (the best machine in the DOE complex) by more than 15 orders of magnitude. In much the same way that tunable lasers revolutionized atomic spectroscopy, this ''Peta-step'' advance in tunable, narrow-bandwidth, capability should enable entirely new fields of study and new, programmatically-interesting, applications such as: micrometer-spatial-resolution, MeV, flash radiography of dense, energetic systems (NIF, JASPER), precision, photo-nuclear absorption spectroscopy (DNT, PAT), non-destructive, resonant nuclear fluorescent imaging of special nuclear materials (NAI, DHS), dynamic, micro-crack failure analysis (aerospace industry, SSP) etc. Concepts are presented for new Thomson-Radiated Extreme X-ray (T-REX) sources at LLNL. These leverage LLNL's world-leading expertise in high-intensity lasers, high average power lasers, diffractive optics, Thomson-based x-ray source development, and advanced photoguns to produce tunable, quasi-monochromatic radiation from 50-keV to several MeV. Above {approx}100 keV, T-REX would be unique in the world with respect to BOTH peak x-ray brilliance AND average x-ray brilliance. This capability would naturally compliment the x-ray capability of large-scale, synchrotron facilities currently within the DoE complex by significantly extending the x-ray energy range over which, tunable, high-brightness applications could be pursued. It would do so at a small fraction of the cost of the purely, accelerator-based facilities. It is anticipated that T-REX could provide new opportunities for interaction of LLNL with the DoE Office of Science, DARPA, DHS etc. and would place LLNL clearly at the forefront of laser-based, x-ray generation world-wide.


Computational Fluid Dynamics 2000

Computational Fluid Dynamics 2000

Author: Nobuyuki Satofuka

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-12-06

Total Pages: 807

ISBN-13: 3642565352

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

These proceedings contain a selection of refereed contributions as a source of reference for all those interested in the state of the art in computational fluid dynamics. The conference brings together physicists, mathematicians and engineers to review and share recent advances in the field.