Physical Review Accelerators and Beams (Jun 2017)

Single shot, double differential spectral measurements of inverse Compton scattering in the nonlinear regime

  • Y. Sakai,
  • I. Gadjev,
  • P. Hoang,
  • N. Majernik,
  • A. Nause,
  • A. Fukasawa,
  • O. Williams,
  • M. Fedurin,
  • B. Malone,
  • C. Swinson,
  • K. Kusche,
  • M. Polyanskiy,
  • M. Babzien,
  • M. Montemagno,
  • Z. Zhong,
  • P. Siddons,
  • I. Pogorelsky,
  • V. Yakimenko,
  • T. Kumita,
  • Y. Kamiya,
  • J. B. Rosenzweig

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.20.060701
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 6
p. 060701

Abstract

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Inverse Compton scattering (ICS) is a unique mechanism for producing fast pulses—picosecond and below—of bright photons, ranging from x to γ rays. These nominally narrow spectral bandwidth electromagnetic radiation pulses are efficiently produced in the interaction between intense, well-focused electron and laser beams. The spectral characteristics of such sources are affected by many experimental parameters, with intense laser effects often dominant. A laser field capable of inducing relativistic oscillatory motion may give rise to harmonic generation and, importantly for the present work, nonlinear redshifting, both of which dilute the spectral brightness of the radiation. As the applications enabled by this source often depend sensitively on its spectra, it is critical to resolve the details of the wavelength and angular distribution obtained from ICS collisions. With this motivation, we present an experimental study that greatly improves on previous spectral measurement methods based on x-ray K-edge filters, by implementing a multilayer bent-crystal x-ray spectrometer. In tandem with a collimating slit, this method reveals a projection of the double differential angular-wavelength spectrum of the ICS radiation in a single shot. The measurements enabled by this diagnostic illustrate the combined off-axis and nonlinear-field-induced redshifting in the ICS emission process. The spectra obtained illustrate in detail the strength of the normalized laser vector potential, and provide a nondestructive measure of the temporal and spatial electron-laser beam overlap.