Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams (Mar 2014)

Start-to-end simulation of x-ray radiation of a next generation light source using the real number of electrons

  • J. Qiang,
  • J. Corlett,
  • C. E. Mitchell,
  • C. F. Papadopoulos,
  • G. Penn,
  • M. Placidi,
  • M. Reinsch,
  • R. D. Ryne,
  • F. Sannibale,
  • C. Sun,
  • M. Venturini,
  • P. Emma,
  • S. Reiche

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.17.030701
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 3
p. 030701

Abstract

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In this paper we report on start-to-end simulation of a next generation light source based on a high repetition rate free electron laser (FEL) driven by a CW superconducting linac. The simulation integrated the entire system in a seamless start-to-end model, including birth of photoelectrons, transport of electron beam through 600 m of the accelerator beam delivery system, and generation of coherent x-ray radiation in a two-stage self-seeding undulator beam line. The entire simulation used the real number of electrons (∼2 billion electrons/bunch) to capture the details of the physical shot noise without resorting to artificial filtering to suppress numerical noise. The simulation results shed light on several issues including the importance of space-charge effects near the laser heater and the reliability of x-ray radiation power predictions when using a smaller number of simulation particles. The results show that the microbunching instability in the linac can be controlled with 15 keV uncorrelated energy spread induced by a laser heater and demonstrate that high brightness and flux 1 nm x-ray radiation (∼10^{12} photons/pulse) with fully spatial and temporal coherence is achievable.