Generation and Use of Coherent X-ray Beams at Future SKIF Storage Ring Доклады на конференциях
Язык | Английский | ||||||
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Тип доклада | Устный | ||||||
Url доклада | https://indico.inp.nsk.su/event/24/contributions/1860/ | ||||||
Конференция |
International Conference "Synchrotron and Free electron laser Radiation: generation and application" 13-17 июл. 2020 , Novosibirsk |
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Авторы |
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Организации |
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Реферат:
In 1990s, the emergence of the 3rd generation synchrotron user facilities equipped with
undulator sources, stimulated pioneering works on interaction of coherent X-ray beams with
matter (Brauer et al. 1995), resulted in the development of X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy
(XPCS) technique, capable to probe nanoscale fluctuations up to kHz frequencies using
dynamics of speckle pattern given by scattering of coherent X-ray beam from the sample. More
recently (and highly aided by the development of modern high-throughput data analysis
algorithms), coherent X-ray diffraction imaging (CXDI), also known as lensless imaging,
revolutionized the field of X-ray microscopy, finally bringing users the possibility of nondestructive 2D and 3D imaging of complex structures with unprecedented ~10 nm resolution.
However, strict requirements to transverse coherence of X-ray probe put serious limits on further
development of CXDI-based techniques at the 3rd generation facilities, where coherent flux after
spatial filtering becomes unacceptably small at energies above ~20 keV. At the same time, the
latter was used as one of the strongest arguments of the user community for push towards
construction of MBA-based 4th generation of storage rings with ultra-low-emittance.
Since coherent flux can be simply expressed as Fcoh=λ24B, where λ is X-ray wavelength, and B
– source brightness, the demand for higher coherent flux is often translated as demand for higher
brightness – a recognizable motto for both accelerator and user communities. From the same
relationship one can also easily see that even more brightness is needed to obtain the same
coherent flux at shorter wavelengths / higher energies. Another expression Fcoh=λ216π2F/εtot,
where F is total flux, and εtot – 4D phase volume of X-ray beam, illustrates that it is the phase
volume of the undulator X-ray source that should be minimized in order to deliver a maximum
number of coherent photons to end-user (given total flux has already reached its limit imposed
by machine current and undulator technology). Whereas at the 3rd generation facilities the phase
volume of undulator source was dominated by electron beam emittance with negligible influence
of other factors, the estimation and minimization of undulator source phase volume at 4th
generation facilities requires more elaborate approach taking into account electron beam energy
spread, undulator phase error, and matching of phase-space ellipses between electron and X-ray
beams.
In our contribution we will present estimations of coherent flux at different energies available for
future users of ultra-low-emittance SKIF storage ring (to be commissioned in 2023) and discuss
ways of its optimization, as well as future scientific program of user experiments with
diffraction-limited X-ray beams.
[1] Brauer, S., Stephenson, G.B., Sutton, M., Brüning, R., Dufresne, E., Mochrie, S.G.J., Grübel,
G., Als-Nielsen, J., and Abernathy, D.L. (1995) X-Ray Intensity Fluctuation Spectroscopy
Observations of Critical Dynamics in Fe3Al. Physical Review Letters, 74, 2010–2013.
Библиографическая ссылка:
Rashchenko S.V.
, Baranov G.
, Skamarokha M.A.
, Zubavichus Y.V.
, Rakshun Y.V.
Generation and Use of Coherent X-ray Beams at Future SKIF Storage Ring
International Conference "Synchrotron and Free electron laser Radiation: generation and application" 13-17 Jul 2020
Generation and Use of Coherent X-ray Beams at Future SKIF Storage Ring
International Conference "Synchrotron and Free electron laser Radiation: generation and application" 13-17 Jul 2020