Abstract
The Old Dominion University Compact Light Source (ODU CLS) design concept is presented - a compact Inverse Compton Light Source (ICLS) with flux and brilliance orders of magnitude beyond conventional laboratory-scale sources and greater than other compact ICLS designs. This concept utilizes the physics of inverse Compton scattering of an extremely low emittance electron beam by a laser pulse of rms length of approximately two-thirds of a picosecond (2/3 ps). The accelerator is composed of a superconducting radio frequency (SRF) reentrant gun followed by four double-spoke SRF cavities. After the linac are three quadrupole magnets to focus the electron beam to the interaction point (IP). The distance from cathode surface to IP is less than 6 m, with the cathode producing electron bunches with a bunch charge of 10 pC and a few picoseconds in length. The incident laser has 1 MW circulating power, a 1 micron wavelength, and a spot size of 3.2 microns at the IP. The repetition rate of this source is 100 MHz, in order to achieve a high flux despite the low bunch charge. The anticipated x-ray source parameters include an energy of 12 keV, with a total flux of 2.2×1013 ph/s, the flux into a 0.1% bandwidth of 3.3×1010 ph/(s 0.1%BW), and the average brilliance of 3.4×1014 ph/(s mm2 mrad2 0.1%BW).
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Deitrick, K. E., Krafft, G. A., Terzić, B., & Delayen, J. R. (2018). High-brilliance, high-flux compact inverse Compton light source. Physical Review Accelerators and Beams, 21(8). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.21.080703
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