Physical Review Accelerators and Beams (Jan 2024)

Attosecond x-ray free-electron lasers utilizing an optical undulator in a self-selection regime

  • Xinlu Xu,
  • Jiaxin Liu,
  • Thamine Dalichaouch,
  • Frank S. Tsung,
  • Zhen Zhang,
  • Zhirong Huang,
  • Mark J. Hogan,
  • Xueqing Yan,
  • Chan Joshi,
  • Warren B. Mori

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.27.011301
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 1
p. 011301

Abstract

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Accelerator-based x-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs) are the latest addition to the revolutionary tools of discovery for the 21st century. The two major components of an XFEL are an accelerator-produced electron beam and a magnetic undulator, which tend to be kilometer-scale long and expensive. A proof-of-principle demonstration of free-electron lasing at 27 nm using beams from compact laser wakefield accelerators was shown recently by using a magnetic undulator. However, scaling these concepts to x-ray wavelengths is far from straightforward as the requirements on the beam quality and jitters become much more stringent. Here, we present an ultracompact scheme to produce tens of attosecond x-ray pulses with several GW peak power utilizing a novel aspect of the FEL instability using a highly chirped, prebunched, and ultrabright tens of MeV electron beam from a plasma-based accelerator interacting with an optical undulator. The FEL resonant relation between the prebunched period and the energy selects resonant electrons automatically from the highly chirped beam which leads to a stable generation of attosecond x-ray pulses. Furthermore, two-color attosecond pulses with subfemtosecond separation can be produced by adjusting the energy distribution of the electron beam so that multiple FEL resonances occur at different locations within the beam. Such a tunable coherent attosecond x-ray sources may open up a new area of attosecond science enabled by x-ray attosecond pump/probe techniques.