Skip to main content
Nature Communications logoLink to Nature Communications
. 2018 Apr 6;9:1334. doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-03776-x

Control of laser plasma accelerated electrons for light sources

T André 1,2, I A Andriyash 1, A Loulergue 1, M Labat 1, E Roussel 1,3, A Ghaith 1,2, M Khojoyan 1, C Thaury 4, M Valléau 1, F Briquez 1, F Marteau 1, K Tavakoli 1, P N’Gotta 1, Y Dietrich 1, G Lambert 4, V Malka 4,5, C Benabderrahmane 1, J Vétéran 1, L Chapuis 1, T El Ajjouri 1, M Sebdaoui 1, N Hubert 1, O Marcouillé 1, P Berteaud 1, N Leclercq 1, M El Ajjouri 1, P Rommeluère 1, F Bouvet 1, J -P Duval 1, C Kitegi 1, F Blache 1, B Mahieu 4, S Corde 4, J Gautier 4, K Ta Phuoc 4, J P Goddet 4, A Lestrade 1, C Herbeaux 1, C Évain 3, C Szwaj 3, S Bielawski 3, A Tafzi 4, P Rousseau 4, S Smartsev 4,5, F Polack 1, D Dennetière 1, C Bourassin-Bouchet 1, C De Oliveira 1, M-E Couprie 1,2,
PMCID: PMC5889396  PMID: 29626187

Abstract

With gigaelectron-volts per centimetre energy gains and femtosecond electron beams, laser wakefield acceleration (LWFA) is a promising candidate for applications, such as ultrafast electron diffraction, multistaged colliders and radiation sources (betatron, compton, undulator, free electron laser). However, for some of these applications, the beam performance, for example, energy spread, divergence and shot-to-shot fluctuations, need a drastic improvement. Here, we show that, using a dedicated transport line, we can mitigate these initial weaknesses. We demonstrate that we can manipulate the beam longitudinal and transverse phase-space of the presently available LWFA beams. Indeed, we separately correct orbit mis-steerings and minimise dispersion thanks to specially designed variable strength quadrupoles, and select the useful energy range passing through a slit in a magnetic chicane. Therefore, this matched electron beam leads to the successful observation of undulator synchrotron radiation after an 8 m transport path. These results pave the way to applications demanding in terms of beam quality.


Electron beam quality in accelerators is crucial for light source application. Here the authors demonstrate beam conditioning of laser plasma electrons thanks to a specific transport line enabling the control of divergence, energy, steering and dispersion and the application to observe undulator radiation.

Introduction

The capacity of plasma waves to produce and sustain extremely strong electric fields gave rise to a high interest for plasma-based electron acceleration1. In the past decade, the concept of laser wakefield acceleration (LWFA) has become a reality24. Worldwide efforts presently aim at improving LWFA performance, targeting applications, such as undulator synchrotron radiation5,6, free electron lasers79, intrinsic betatron radiation10, ultrafast electron diffraction sources11 and even high-energy colliders12. In modern LWFA schemes, a high-power femtosecond laser is focused into a gas target and resonantly drives a nonlinear plasma wave. The charge-separation fields in such waves are much larger than in the radio-frequency cavities of conventional accelerators. Being able to trap the ambient plasma electrons, plasma fields accelerate them to hundreds of megaelectron-volts over few millimetre distances1315. The characteristics of the produced electron beams strongly depend on how they are injected into the accelerating plasma structures. Depending on the desired application, the LWFA can be based on self injection24,16,17, on triggering local injection using an auxiliary laser pulse18,19 or by creating sharp plasma density transitions2022. The localised injection requires more complicated setups but can significantly improve beam quality in terms of energy spread and divergence. In both configurations, the ionisation injection2226, which uses a gas with a mixture of low and high atomic number ions, enables an improvement in the source stability22,27, but may also lead to a higher energy spread. By guiding the laser pulse at high intensity over a longer distance, high-energy electrons are obtained28. Experimentally, robust operation of LWFA, with all state-of-the-art beam characteristics (multi-gigaelectron-volt energies, hundreds pico-Coulomb charge, sub-percent energy spread and sub-milliradian divergence) remains extremely challenging. Moreover, the transport of such beams holds nontrivial complications, since beams with large energy spread and divergence develop a chromatic behaviour, that leads to a dramatic growth in emittance2932 and consequently beam quality degradation in the transfer lines. While conventional accelerators deliver microradian divergence and per mille of energy spread beams, the quality issues of LWFA require specific electron beam manipulation in order to fit the FEL application requirements, in particular to handle the large initial divergence with conventional permanent magnet quadrupole type5,6,3335 or plasma-based3639 focusing devices, and to mitigate the energy spread with magnetic chicanes for beam decompression4042 or transverse gradient undulators43. A proper electron beam control is one of the main challenges towards the Graal of developing a compact alternative of X-ray free-electron lasers by coupling LWFA gigaelectron-volts per centimetre acceleration gradient with undulators in the amplification regime.

Here we show that the LWFA beam properties can be controlled thanks to a dedicated transfer line comprising multiple magnetic devices44. The variable strength quadrupoles handle beam divergence and control its chromatic focusing along the beamline. A special alignment strategy was developed for separate correction of beam dispersion and position, and mitigation of pointing fluctuations. A slit equipped magnetic chicane decompresses the beam and selects the desired energy range. We finally matched this shaped electron beam to successfully produce undulator radiation.

Results

Concept and configuration

A schematic of the manipulation line is shown in Fig. 1 (see Methods section for details of the equipment). The LWFA is operated in the ionisation injection mode, preferred for the sake of its simplicity and robustness to long term (several hours) operation. A Ti:Sapphire laser system delivers 1.5 J, 30 fs full width at half-maximum (FWHM) pulses focused into the supersonic jet of He and N2 gas mixture. Electron beams of up to a hundred pico-Coulomb are produced in a broad energy spectrum spanning from few tens up to ~250 MeV with few milliradians divergence. This large divergence is rapidly handled via strong focusing using a first set of removable permanent magnet quadrupoles, located 5 cm downstream from the gas jet. A magnetic chicane then longitudinally stretches the beam, sorts electrons in energy and selects the energy range of interest via a removable and adjustable slit mounted in the middle of the chicane. The second set of quadrupoles matches the beam inside an in-vacuum undulator that creates a periodic magnetic field (period λu = 18 mm, period number Nu = 107). Several scintillator screens can be inserted along the line to image the electron beam in the transverse plane45. Transfer line components and LWFA laser are aligned within ±100 μm on the same reference axis using a laser tracker.

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

Scheme of the COXINEL manipulation line: laser hutch (grey), gas jet (cyan), removable permanent magnet quadrupoles (grey) which can be replaced by an electron spectrometer, magnetic chicane (dipole magnet in red) with a slit (brown) inserted in the middle of the chicane, electromagnetic quadrupoles (blue), undulator (purple), cavity beam position monitors (yellow), dipole dump (red), beam dump (grey) and CCD camera (black). LANEX and YAG screens for electron beam imagers. Measured (top) and simulated (down) electron beam transverse profiles (horizontal: x and vertical: z direction) along the line

Passing through the undulator, the beam produces synchrotron radiation with a spectrum, which typically consists of a series of lines at the so-called resonance wavelength λr and its harmonics (order n), given by λr=λu(1+Ku22+γ2θ2)(2nγ2), Ku being the deflection parameter proportional to the peak magnetic field and period, γ the Lorentz factor and θ the observation angle46. The line is tuned for a reference energy of 176 MeV, corresponding to a λr = 200 nm on-axis radiation for Ku = 1.8 achieved for the 5 mm gap. The undulator radiation lines present a homogenous FWHM linewidth Δλhom being given by Δλhomλr0.9Nu, i.e. 0.8% in this case. But a large energy spread σγ induces an inhomogeneous broadening Δλσγλr2σγγ which can completely dominate the homogeneous linewidth (by a factor 50 for 20% energy spread). The effective energy spread of electrons, and thus the radiation linewidth, can be reduced by inserting an adjustable width slit in the chicane.

LWFA electron beam

Figure 2a shows an electron beam spectrum, measured right after the gas jet, by inserting a spectrometer when the permanent magnet quadrupoles are extracted from the beamline. It exhibits a broad energy spectrum. The vertical divergence σz is analysed by slice because of the energy dependence, and the average value is found to be 4.5 mrad root mean square (RMS) with a standard deviation of 0.3 mrad over 20 shots. The slice divergence in the energy range of 176 ± 5 MeV is 3.5 mrad RMS with a standard deviation of 0.2 mrad over 20 shots. The electron beam transverse distribution measured on the first screen (Fig. 2b) provides an average horizontal divergence σx of 12.1 mrad RMS with a standard deviation of 0.5 mrad and σz of 7.1 mrad RMS with a standard deviation of 0.2 mrad. This larger vertical divergence results from the low energy electrons that are not captured by the spectrometer. As revealed in Fig. 2c, d, significant pointing fluctuations (2.2 mrad RMS) are observed and can be attributed to the intrinsic features of the LWFA source.

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

Measured LWFA beam energy and transverse distribution without QUAPEVA. a Measurement with the spectrometer before the first screen, with corresponding energy profile and vertical divergence evaluated by superimposing the divergence in energy slices of ±1 MeV and renormalised to the charge in the given slice (solid line), and in the case of 176 ± 5 MeV (dashed line). b Electron beam transverse distribution observed on the first LANEX screen located at 64 cm from the source, without spectrometer, with corresponding horizontal and vertical profiles. c Shot-to-shot measured pointing stability and d associated statistics on the electron beam sizes

Divergence handling

A first triplet of strong permanent magnet quadrupoles, called QUAPEVA, ensures a strong focusing of the large electron beam divergence. Conventional quadrupoles—permanent magnet based for high gradient delivery—were preferred to plasma lenses for the sake of simplicity, flexibility, reliability and large possible demagnification. QUAPEVAs, unlike usual permanent magnet based focusing systems5,6,34,47, can vary their gradient strengths by a factor 24850 thanks to a special design combining a Halbach type quadrupole surrounded by rotating cylindrical magnets. They are also equipped with motorised translation plates for magnetic axis adjustment in both transverse directions. With the QUAPEVA triplet inserted, the projected transverse size is reduced from 6 to 2 mm RMS in the horizontal plane and from 3.5 to 1 mm RMS in the vertical plane (Fig. 3a, d). Assuming an on-axis point source, the physical aperture of the QUAPEVAs let pass through more than 85% of the beam charge (Fig. 4c, d) and the transport line naturally filters the low energy electrons (Fig. 4). While the QUAPEVAs provide a strong focusing, they also permit to freeze the total-emittance growth at the exit of the triplet. The slice emittance around 176 MeV for ±5 MeV slice is typically increased from 1 to 92 (H) and 30 (V) (π.mm.mrad) due to the large initial divergence but remains then unaffected along the line. The focused beam, both measured and simulated, also exhibits a cross-like shape which results from chromatic effects (Fig. 3b, e). Indeed, the low energy electrons are focused horizontally while the high-energy ones are focused vertically (Fig. 3c, f). The transport relies on a source-to-image optics in which the focusing magnification depends on the energy range (Fig. 4a, b) (see Methods section).

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3

Electron beam transverse profiles observed on the first LANEX screen. Measured transverse profile without (a) and with (d) permanent magnet quadrupoles of variable strength (QUAPEVA). b, e Associated numerical simulations (see Methods section) of the transverse profile assuming a broadband energy spectrum spanning from 50 to 280 MeV and using the measured divergences and a screen resolution of 150 μm and simulated electron energy distribution in the transverse plane (c, f)

Fig. 4.

Fig. 4

Electron beam properties along the line. a Horizontal and b vertical envelopes for 171 (dashed), 176 (solid) and 181 (dotted) MeV electron beam energies. c Losses along the line: 176 (red), 150 (green) MeV, spectrum from Fig. 2 (blue). d Horizontal (vertical) pipe diameter: dashed (solid). QUAPEVAs (grey), dipole (red), electromagnetic quadrupoles (blue), undulator (purple)

Beam alignment along the line

To progress further down the line, while maintaining the beam quality, large orbit deviations and dispersion must be reduced to minimise the beam distortions in the undulator. Both can appear due to a misalignment of the magnetic elements with respect to the electron beam axis, resulting either from a defect of initial position of the equipment (in particular the QUAPEVA) or from systematic and random shifts of the electron beam pointing. While in some cases this electron steering issue can be addressed using magnetised plasma guiding37,38,51, a specific beam pointing alignment compensation (BPAC) strategy, taking advantage of the motorised translations of the QUAPEVA, is here implemented. The horizontal and vertical response matrices Ax(s) and Az(s) of the system, at a position s along the line, that link the beam position and dispersion to the transverse offset of the magnetic centre of the three QUAPEVAs, are solved (see Methods section). The proper positions of the quadrupole magnetic centres are tuned to independently minimise the transverse offset and the dispersion according to the required correction on a given screen in both planes. This procedure is illustrated in Fig. 5 for two positions along the line. In the middle of the chicane, where a strong horizontal dispersion is produced, the vertical dispersion is corrected (Fig. 5a) (tilted beam in position I rotates towards position II). A ±400 μm maximum correction of QUAPEVA transverse displacement mitigates the residual alignment errors of the quadrupoles and a change of the electrons pointing. Then, on a daily basis, adjustments remain within 10–150 μm. Further steps of BPAC include optimisation of the beam on the downstream screens before and after the undulator. The horizontal dispersion is then corrected on the screen located in front of the undulator (Fig. 5b): the initial beam (I) is artificially dispersed vertically leading to a tilted image (II) indicating the presence of horizontal dispersion, which is then suppressed by rotating the beam towards the vertical direction (III), finally the introduced vertical dispersion is removed leading to a well-focused dispersion-free centred round spot (IV). Figure 5c compares the applied position corrections of the dispersion-free electron beam from the model to the experimental measurements. BPAC enables to control the electron beam position and dispersion just at the exit of the QUAPEVA all along the downstream line even in presence of electron pointing and residual equipment misalignment.

Fig. 5.

Fig. 5

Beam pointing alignment compensation alignment method. Superimposed images with the appropriate adjustment of the QUAPEVA magnetic axis. a Case of screen in the middle of the chicane where the beam is horizontally dispersed, correction of the vertical dispersion (from I to II). On screen located at the undulator entrance: b initial beam (I), with artificial vertical dispersion introduced (II), with horizontal dispersion corrected (III), with artificial vertical dispersion removed (IV), c beam experimental transverse position control with respect to expected displacements from the model (black crosses)

Fine tuning of the focused energies

As a final control step, the variable gradient of the QUAPEVA allows for the fine tuning of the electron beam focusing. Minor tuning of quadrupole strength (decrease of the second QUAPEVA strength by 1.5% from the model) enables the beam shape optimisation from a cross-shaped profile (Fig. 6a) to a small round spot on the screen placed after the undulator (Fig. 6c). Numerical analysis demonstrates that the cross-shape results from electrons being focused at different planes according to their energies, as illustrated in the phase-space representations. Measurements and simulations are similar; the tilt of the cross results from a remaining QUAPEVA skew quadrupole. Furthermore, for a well-focused beam, a strength scan of all quadrupoles (QUAPEVA and electromagnetic quadrupoles) along the line by the same ±2% amount permits to select the focused energies while keeping the electron beams well centred on the screen with the same size (Fig. 6b–d).

Fig. 6.

Fig. 6

Transverse profile of the electron beam for different quadrupole strengths. Electron beam optics focusing on the screen downstream the undulator without slit, for the 176 MeV reference case. Experimental, simulated profiles and associate modelled phase-space plot a mismatched case, c well-focused case with a 1.5% correction of QUAPEVA 2, variation of the gradients of all the quadrupoles (permanent magnet and electromagnetic) by −2% (b) and +2% (d)

Following the above strategy, the electron beam is properly handled all along the line. The measured beam transverse distributions (Fig. 1, upper images) correspond indeed to the simulated ones (Fig. 1, lower images).

Photon observation

The shaped electron beam is suitable for the observation of the undulator synchrotron radiation with a camera installed under vacuum at the end of the line. Figure 7a, b display the transverse profiles of the radiation measured and simulated (see Methods section) without the slit: they are similar in terms of both signal level and profile shape. Simulations indicate that the physical acceptance of the beamline, defined by the vacuum chamber geometry, naturally removes the energies below 130 MeV from the initial broad energy spectrum (Fig. 7c), leading to a reduction of the energy spread down to 30% RMS. When the 4 mm slit is inserted, the energy spread decreases to 8% RMS. A charge up to 17.4 pC, without the slit, is transported through the undulator closed at gap 5 mm. With the slit inserted, this charge drops to 5.2 pC. The resonant wavelengths corresponding to the electron beam energy range are displayed in Fig. 7d. For example, for a gap g = 5 mm, λr spans from 98 to 358 nm without the slit, and is reduced to 161–230 nm range with the slit inserted. With larger gaps, the deflection parameter decreases as Ku exp-agλu+bg2λu2 with a and b constants, and λr is reduced (see Methods section). Thus, opening the gap produces two effects: the decrease of the total radiation power, PKu2, and a blue-shift of the produced spectrum, λr(1+Ku22+γr2θ2). Figure 7e shows measurements of the integrated camera signal vs. gap above 150 nm (due to the optics system transmission), applying several spectral bandpass filters. When opening the gap, the signals decrease, both for measurements and simulations. In the case when the electron beam is not spectrally filtered (black stars), the camera receives the on-axis and the red-shifted off-axis radiation, associated with the resonant wavelengths and its harmonics. The signal follows qualitatively the dependence of the undulator total power, decreasing as the intensity collected in the detection spectral range. The measurements with the bandpass filtered inserted (coloured markers) provide a further insight on spectral behaviour. With 253 and 300 nm filters mainly off-axis light is collected, exhibiting a similar gap dependance as the total power. Alternatively, with the 200 nm narrow-band filter on-axis (at low gaps) and off-axis radiation is seen, leading to slightly different evolutions vs. gap. At 5 mm gap the camera collects the purely on-axis 200 nm light. While at 6 mm gap, the resonant wavelength decreases, the 200 nm filter band gets the red-shifted off-axis radiation whose intensity is larger than the on-axis one46 resulting in a maximum on the gap curve (Fig. 7e). All these features clearly demonstrate the synchrotron radiation nature of the light emitted and, according to simulations, the full number of photons per beam charge at the exit of the undulator can be estimated as Nph ≈ 3 × 107 pC−1.

Fig. 7.

Fig. 7

Observation of undulator radiation. Measurement (a) and numerical modelling (b) of the radiation flux density normalised to 1 pC (without slit, bandpass filters and focusing lens). c Spectrum measured at the exit of the electron source (dotted), and simulated at the entrance of the undulator after transport in the line (dashed), with the 4 mm slit (solid curve). d On-axis resonant wavelength ranges without (blue) and with (red) slit, with electrons below 10% of the maximum charge excluded and spectral FWHM bandwidth of the optical filters. e Total photon count measured by a camera with a lens and normalised by the beam charge black stars: without slit and bandpass filter, downscaled by a factor 10; with a 4 mm slit, red circles: 300 nm, green diamonds: 253 nm, blue squares: 200 nm filter. Error bars: mean values and deviations of acquired data sets, solid curves: numerical simulation

Discussion

In conclusion, we have shown that the LWFA electron beam properties can be manipulated through an adequate transport line, mitigating the performance that do not meet the one of state-of-the-art conventional accelerators for some-specific applications. This electron beam control is not restricted to LWFA, but could be of interest for various advanced accelerating techniques. These results pave the way for further merging of novel and conventional accelerator techniques towards future applications, such as the new generation of colliders, requiring stages of LWFA accelerating modules or free electron laser applications, relying on more optimised LWFA performance that are progressing very fast.

Methods

Electron generation

A 60 TW, 800 nm, 30 fs FWHM Ti:Sapphire laser, managed by the Laboratoire d’Optique Appliquée team in “Salle Jaune,” is focused on a 12 × 15 μm2 FWHM spot into a supersonic jet filled with a gas mixture (99% Helium, 1% Nitrogen). The precision of the laser alignment is within 10 μm in position and 10 μrad in angle. The electron beam generation is optimised thanks to a first electron spectrometer, located 355 mm from the gas jet, consisting of a removable permanent magnet dipole (1.1 T field, 10 cm length) in conjunction with a phosphor screen imaged on a CCD camera, providing a spectral resolution varying between 2.7 and 3.8% between 50 and 280 MeV. During experiments, electrons are generated, aiming at a 176 MeV reference energy, over a broad energy range. Over 422 recorded shots during 1 month of experiments, σx (respectively σz) = 12.6 (5.6) mrad RMS with a standard deviation of 1.8 (1.5) mrad are measured on the first screen. These large values mainly reflect the contribution of the low energy electrons. The energy distribution obtained with the electron spectrometer ranges from 50 to 280 MeV, and the slice vertical divergence, deduced from the spectrometer, has typical values of 3.9 mrad at 100 ± 5 MeV, 3.2 mrad at 150 ± 5 MeV and 2.9 mrad at 200 ± 5 MeV. The slice horizontal divergence is deduced from the average horizontal divergence (σx=12.1 mrad), measured on the first screen without QUAPEVAs, normalised by the ratio of the slice vertical divergence measured with the spectrometer, over the average divergence measured on the first screen (σz=7.1 mrad). Typical horizontal divergence values are: 6.6 mrad at 100 ± 5 MeV, 5.4 mrad at 150 ± 5 MeV and 4.9 mrad at 200 ± 5 MeV.

Equipment of the transfer line

The equipment used in the transfer line have been designed and prepared at Synchrotron SOLEIL.

Magnetic elements: all the magnetic elements have been designed using RADIA52 and TOSCA53 codes. After construction, they have been measured. Their fiducial references taken on the magnetic measurement bench have been reported on the installed transfer line thanks to a FARO Vantage laser tracker.

The QUAPEVA50, developed in the frame of a SOLEIL/Sigmaphi collaboration, consists of two parts: an inner hybrid Halbach type quadrupolar ring54 surrounded by four cylindrical magnets screened by poles, the gradient being varied by rotation of these magnets around their axis. A gradient up to 210 T m−1 with a 50% tunability for a bore diameter of 10.5 mm can be reached, while containing reasonably the harmonic content. The installed triplet enables an operation between 176 and 400 MeV. The gradient and multipolar systematic terms measured with three different methods (stretched wire55 of relative precision of 6 × 10−4, rotating coil of relative precision of 8 × 10−356, pulse wire57) correspond to the expectations from the models. The residual excursion of the magnetic centre for the gradient adjustment method (by rotating the four cylinders of the outer quadrupole in the same direction) remained in the 100 μm range, and was compensated by embedded correction tables applied on translation stages. The gradient is controlled within 0.5% mechanical precision of magnetic cylinder repositioning, the stretched wire measurement precision being much lower.

The magnetic chicane consists of four water-cooled dipoles manufactured by SEF providing 0.55 T when powered at 150 A (Sigmaphi Electronics bipolar power supplies, 8 V, 30 ppm, calibrated at SOLEIL) for 25 mm yoke gap. The electron beam dump dipole powered at 300 A provides 0.84 T. All dipoles have been measured on a SOLEIL magnetic measurement bench including a Hall probe system (consisting of three single-axis Hall probes (FW Bell GH-701) with a 1 V T−1 sensibility) and a rotating coil (a 20 turn 3.5 m long coil made of a 0.1 mm diameter copper wire, reproducibility of 1.5%). The field measurements of one of the dipoles at 150 A with two other systems (a Group3 Teslameter and a Metrolab PT2025 NMR system) show an agreement of 10 mT, corresponding to a relative error of 1.8%, which can be explained by the relative position and orientation of the different probes, and by the hysteresis influence.

A removable aluminium slit of variable width (up to 4 mm) is inserted, in the middle of the chicane, at 32 ± 0.5 mm horizontal position corresponding to the 176 MeV energy, the positioning error resulting from the mechanical tolerances of the different parts.

The electromagnetic quadrupoles, manufactured by SEF, have been measured at SOLEIL with a 0.33% relative accuracy.

The 2 m long 18 mm period cryo-ready undulator, equipped with Pr2Fe14B magnets and Vanadium Permendur pole, has been developed at SOLEIL. For simplicity of infrastructure, it is operated for the experiment at room temperature, without Nitrogen cooling. In such a case, the peak magnetic field reaches 1.11 (respectively 1.005) T at 5 (respectively 5.5) mm gap, corresponding to a resonant wavelength at 200 nm for an electron beam energy of 176 (respectively 164) MeV. At 5 mm gap, 160 MeV are resonant at 243 nm, and 170 MeV at 215 nm. The magnetic field is known at 0.2%, resulting from the Hall uncertainties of calibration. The undulator deflection parameter dependence vs. gap is fitted using first harmonic of the measured magnetic field leading to: Ku exp-agλu+bg2λu2 with a = 3.54 ± 0.05 and b = 0.22 ± 0.05.

Electron and photon diagnostics: the four electron beam imagers installed along the line consist of a scintillating screen mounted on a motorised stage for insertion on the electron beam axis, of imaging optics and of a camera. The screens are back-side imaged. On the first imager (LWFA exit), a LANEX type screen protected by a 75 μm black ionised aluminium foil is used together with a pair of simple focusing lenses and a 12 bit Basler scA640 CCD camera. The magnification ratio (0.12 and 0.17, respectively in the horizontal and vertical plane) together with the screen leads to a resolution of about 150 μm. For the downstream imagers, a LANEX or YAG:Ce screen protected by a 25 μm black ionised Aluminium foil can be inserted while the imaging optics is a commercial objective (f/2 100 mm focal length ZEISS MACRO or f/2.8 105 mm focal length SIGMA MACRO) and the camera is a 16 bit ORCA Flash 4.0 cMOS from Hamamatsu. The magnification ratio (0.35 and 0.5, respectively in the horizontal and vertical plane) together with the screen grain size allow to reach a resolution of 100 μm using a LANEX and of 30 μm using a YAG:Ce.

For beam charge measurements, the line is equipped with two Turbo Integrating Current Transformers (T-ICT) from Bergoz (specified for 10 fC noise), one after the electron generation chamber and a second one at the undulator exit45, and with two cavity beam position monitors (from SwissFEL58) on both sides of the undulator, operating in charge mode. The screen of the imager located after the undulator has been calibrated with the measurement performed with the second ICT, which has been calibrated by the supplier BERGOZ, leading to a conversion of 1.5 × 107 counts pC−145. The agreement with the absolute calibration5961, is found within a factor 2.

The undulator radiation was imaged with a Princeton Instruments PIXIS XO 2048 B camera, located directly under vacuum at the exit of the line, with a 75 mm fused silica biconvex lens (Newport SBX052) in front of it, limiting the detected wavelengths above 150 nm. Bandpass filters from Edmund Optics were employed for spectral selectivity (a filter centred at 200 nm (16% transmission) with a 10.2 nm FWHM width, a filter centred at 254 nm (30% transmission) with 40.8 nm FWHM width, and a filter centred at 300 nm (32% transmission) with a 46.2 nm FWHM width).

Modelling

Electron beam modelling: limited to the first order, the propagation of an electron through a magnetic system can be represented with a matrix formalism: X(s) = RX(0), where X(s) = (x(s), x(s), z(s), z(s), ζ(s), δ = ΔP/P0) is the six-dimensional phase-space vector that describes the electron positions and momenta at any position s along the trajectory and is a 6 × 6 matrix that represents the magnetic line with R = R(n)⋯R(1)R(0) the product of the individual transport matrix of the elements of the line (i.e. drift, quadrupoles, bendings, etc.).

The transport relies on a source-to-image optics. In the case of a monoenergetic electron beam, a first estimate of the demagnification factor due to the QUAPEVA focusing is given by σf = σi × R12/D with σf (σi) the focused (unfocused) beam size, R12 the element of the transport matrix linking the position and the momentum of the electrons (R12 = 0.327 m, horizontal plane, and R34 = 0.144 m, vertical plane, D = 0.64 m the distance between the screen and the electron source).

The transfer line design is fitted with BETA62 up to the second order. High order nonlinear effects and collective effects like coherent synchrotron radiation32, are modelled using a home-made multiparticle tracking code. Similar results are obtained with ASTRA32,63, ELEGANT64 and OCELOT65. For comparison with experiment, modelling is performed with home-made code for Figs. 1, 4, 6 and 8 with ELEGANT for Figs. 3, 4 and with OCELOT for Fig. 7. A hard edge model with equivalent magnetic length is used for the QUAPEVA, and the effective focusing loss (0.5%) resulting of the longitudinal fringe field extension is accounted for the experiment. Apertures of the vacuum chamber along the line are included for the beam losses evaluation. The beamline was designed for a 100% transmission of a 1% relative energy spread beam at 176 MeV. The physical aperture of the vacuum chamber results in a charge transmission of the order of 25% over a large energy range, at the entrance of the undulator.

Fig. 8.

Fig. 8

Evolution of the normalised emittance along the transport line. a Horizontal and b vertical emittance for a ±1 MeV slice and for a ±5 MeV slice c, d without (blue) and with (red) magnetic defects for a reference beam of 1 mrad divergence (solid lines) and using measured divergences from Fig. 2a (dashed lines)

Electron beam parameters used for the simulations are deduced from the measurements. The electron beam distribution is taken from the charge and vertical distribution vs. energy between 50 and 280 MeV. The electron beam horizontal divergence is rescaled form spectrometer and first screen measurements. The emittance is taken constant and equal to 1.0 mm.mrad in both directions.

For the chromatic focusing optics, the quadrupole gradients are for QUAPEVA 1: +102.8 T m−1 with skew contribution (ratio of skew gradient over normal gradient) of +6.5 × 10−3, for QUAPEVA 2: −101.2 T m−1 with skew contribution of −19.8 × 10−3, for QUAPEVA 3: +88.17 T m−1 and a field variation of 2% at 4-mm radius due to a dodecapole component and with skew contribution of −18.3 × 10−3, for QEM 1: −2.43 T m−1, for QEM 2: +3.98 T m−1, for QEM 3: −5.76 T m−1, for QEM 4: +2.14 T m−1.

For laser plasma acceleration beams presenting broad energy distribution and large divergence, the contribution of the chromatic emittance cannot be neglected, as usually done in the case of conventional accelerators. The phase-space emittance, limited to a drift space, is expressed as30,66: εn,x2=εn0,x2+γspx2σδ2 with εn0,x the initial normalised emittance of the beam, px the horizontal momentum, σδ the energy deviation and s the distance from the source. For large divergence and energy spread, the second term becomes dominant. In the trace-space67, the emittance at undulator centre in the supermatching case can be expressed up to the second order in energy deviation as41: εt,x2=εt0,x2+R126R11σx2σδ2 with σx the divergence, R11 the transport matrix elements linking the positions, R126 the one linking the position to the transverse momentum and the energy deviation68. In the case of ±1 mrad divergence for which the transport line has been initially design (see Fig. 4), the trace-space emittance remains the same for the ±1 MeV slice and is contained to a factor 3 in vertical for the ±5 MeV slice. The magnetic defects (QUAPEVA remaining skew and dodecapole components) start to affect the emittance (via the first term of the equation) for divergences greater than 2 mrad. With the experimental 5.3 (3.1) mrad horizontal (vertical) divergences, the emittance grows via the chromatic term. The increase of the total emittance at the exit of the QUAPEVAs leads to a degradation of the transverse beam brightness by a factor 92 horizontally and 30 vertically (see Table 1 and see Fig. 8), while the slice emittance (slice of ±1 MeV around 176 MeV) increases by a factor 58 (15) horizontally (vertically), indicating that the slice emittance associated to a given energy of interest is kept smaller. These chromatic effects could even be turned into an advantage for an FEL amplification application along the undulator when adopting a chromatic matching optics41 where only a slice of a given energy is of interest.

Table 1.

Simulated electron beam properties along the transport line

Location
Screen location Source First one Before undulator After undulator
Slice (MeV) ±1 ±5 ±1 ±5 ±1 ±5 ±1 ±5
σx (μm) 0.6 0.6 1830 1830 575 748 634 913
σz (μm) 1.0 1.0 509 509 242 392 207 433
σs (μm) 1.0 1.0 9 9 17 72 18 73
εnx (mm.mrad) 1.0 1.0 58 93 58 92 58 92
εnz (mm.mrad) 1.0 1.0 15 31 15 30 15 28

Numerical computations assuming a flat-top beam distribution, σδ = 1.64% (±5 MeV) and σδ = 0.33% (±1 MeV), using the measured divergences from Fig. 2a

Electron BPAC modelling: a conventional beam-based alignment (BBA) of magnetic elements would consist in varying the gradient while changing the magnetic axis of a quadrupole which would align the electron path along the magnet centre but not necessarily the electron path along the axis of the transfer line69. An empirical BBA technique with electron beam energy variation has been employed for single-pass free-electron lasers70. The proposed BPAC method consists in compensating the initial pointing of the electron beam and QUAPEVAs with respect to the line, thanks to the QUAPEVA magnetic centre resettings. In order to apply the BPAC, one needs to numerically compute the response matrix of the line linking the position and dispersion of the beam to the transverse offset of the QUAPEVAs. The transport of the beam is done numerically by applying in a first step, a transverse offset ΔZi = (Δxi, Δzi) to the magnetic centre of the QUAPEVA i in consideration for the case of an ideal beam without energy dispersion (i.e. δ = 0), and in a second step, by considering an electron beam with a given energy dispersion δ ≠ 0:

Xi,A(s)=Rs,ΔZiX(0,δ=0), 1
Xi,B(s)=Rs,ΔZiX(0,δ0). 2

The induced orbit (xi(s), zi(s)) and dispersion (Dx,i(s), Dz,i(s)) due to the misalignment of the QUAPEVA i at any position s along the line are equal to:

xi(s)=xi,A(s), 3
zi(s)=zi,A(s), 4
Dx,i(s)=xi,B(s)-xi,A(s)δ, 5
Dz,i(s)=zi,B(s)-zi,A(s)δ, 6

where <> is the average over the entire electron bunch. From Eqs. (36), the response matrix Ax,z(s) of the transport line can be expressed as:

Ax(s)=x1(s)x2(s)x3(s)Dx,1(s)Dx,2(s)Dx,3(s), 7
Az(s)=z1(s)z2(s)z3(s)Dz,1(s)Dz,2(s)Dz,3(s), 8

and the orbit (x(s), z(s)) and dispersion (Dx(s), Dz(s)) of the electron beam are deduced by:

x(s)Dx(s)=Ax(s)Δx1Δx2Δx3, 9
z(s)Dz(s)=Az(s)Δz1Δz2Δz3, 10

where Δxi, Δzi are the QUAPEVAs transverse offset. By solving Eqs. (9, 10), one can deduce the transverse offset to apply to the QUAPEVAs to correct independently the orbit and dispersion deduced from beam positions and profiles on the given screens. The under-determined system is solved by means of a least square methods and exhibits very small residual orbit and dispersion slopes at the exit of the permanent quadrupoles making it almost valid for all screens.

Modelling of the undulator radiation: simulations of undulator radiation are performed using LWFA test particle beam with a broad energy spectrum (see dotted curve in the inset of Figs. 7c), 0.5 mm.mrad emittance, 3 mrad vertical and 5 mrad horizontal divergences. The 12,000 test particles are propagated in the undulator with Δs = λu/50 steps, using the second order Boris method71. Orbits are recorded and integrated to compute the spectral-angular distribution of radiation energy using classical far-field approach (see ref.72):

dEdΩdω=14πε0e24π2cp-dtn×(n-β)×βij(1-nβ)2eiω(t-nrec)2, 11

with ε0 the vacuum permittivity. It has been checked that similar results are found with the more accurate near-field model given by73:

Eω=14πε0ieωc-dt1Rβ-n1+icωReiω(t+Rc). 12

Simulations presented in Fig. 7 are modelled in far-field approximation, as it is less sensitive to the issues related to the finite integration limits. Beam transport until the undulator is simulated with the OCELOT tracking code, which was modified to enable the large spectra beam modelling, and the orbits inside the undulator and emission is calculated with help of the dedicated modules of the home-made code CHIMERA74.

To reproduce the measurements, the simulated spectra are treated with the optics characteristics, i.e. quantum-efficiency curve of camera, transmission of the band-pass filters and of the lens.

Data availability

The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding authors upon reasonable request.

Electronic supplementary material

Peer Review File (462.5KB, pdf)

Acknowledgements

This work was partially supported by the European Research Council for the Advanced Grants COXINEL (340015, PI: M.-E. C.) and X-Five (339128, PI: V.M.), the EuPRAXIA design study (653782) and the Fondation de la Cooperation Scientifique (QUAPEVA-2012-058T). The authors acknowledge J. Daillant, A. Nadji, P. Morin, A. Taleb, A. Thompson and A. Rousse for their support. The authors would like also to thank members of the Accelerator and Engineering Division and of the Experimental Division of SOLEIL, J. L. Lancelot and his team at Sigmaphi for the joint development of the QUAPEVA magnets.

Author contributions

S.C., J.G., J.P.G., G.L., B.M., V.M., P. Rou., S.S., A.T., K.T.P. and C.T. worked on the laser-based electron acceleration. The line was designed by A.Lo. with M.-E.C., M.L., K.T. and modelled by T.A., I.A.A, M.K., A.Lo. and E.R. Equipments were prepared by C.B., P.B., F.Bo., F.Br., M.-E.C., Y.D., T.E.A., A.G., C.K., A.Lo., O.M., F.M., P.N., M.V. and J.V. for the magnetic elements and the undulator, T.A., C.B.-B., M.E.C., D.D., M.-E.A., N.H., G.L., A.Lo., M.L., F.P., K.T.P. and C.T. for the diagnostics. K.T. and C.D.O worked on the mechanical design and assembly, J.-P.D., C.H., P.Rom. on the vacuum, T.A., M.-E.C., M.L., A.Le., M.S. and M.V. on the alignment, T.A., I.A., F.Br., L.C., M.L, N.L., A.Lo., E.R., M.V. on the control system. T.A., I.A.A, S.B., S.C., C.E., M.-E.C., J.G., J.P.G., A.G., M.K., A.Lo., M.L., G.L., B.M., E.R., S.S., C.S., K.T.P. and C.T. worked on the experiment. Data were analysed by T.A., I.A.A., S.C., M.-E.C., M.K., A.Lo., M.L., E.R. and C.T. The paper was written by I.A.A., M.-E.C., A.Lo., M.L. and E.R.

Competing interests

The authors declare no competing interests.

Footnotes

A correction to this article is available online at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-04299-1.

Electronic supplementary material

Supplementary Information accompanies this paper at 10.1038/s41467-018-03776-x.

Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Change history

5/2/2018

The original version of this Article contained an error in the last sentence of the first paragraph of the Introduction and incorrectly read ‘A proper electron beam control is one of the main challenges towards the Graal of developing a compact alternative of X-ray free-electron lasers by coupling LWFA gigaelectron-volts per centimetre acceleration gradient with undulators in the amplification regime in equation 11, nx(n-β) x β: n the two times and beta the two times should be bold since they are vectorsin Eq. 12, β should be bold as well.’ The correct version is ‘A proper electron beam control is one of the main challenges towards the Graal of developing a compact alternative of X-ray free-electron lasers by coupling LWFA gigaelectron-volts per centimetre acceleration gradient with undulators in the amplification regime.’This has been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.

References

  • 1.Tajima T, Dawson JM. Laser electron accelerator. Phys. Rev. Lett. 1979;43:267–270. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.43.267. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 2.Faure J, et al. A laser-plasma accelerator producing monoenergetic electron beams. Nature. 2004;431:541–544. doi: 10.1038/nature02963. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 3.Geddes C, et al. High-quality electron beams from a laser wakefield accelerator using plasma-channel guiding. Nature. 2004;431:538–541. doi: 10.1038/nature02900. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 4.Mangles S, et al. Monoenergetic beams of relativistic electrons from intense laser-plasma interactions. Nature. 2004;431:535–538. doi: 10.1038/nature02939. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 5.Schlenvoigt HP, et al. A compact synchrotron radiation source driven by a laser-plasma wakefield accelerator. Nat. Phys. 2008;4:130–133. doi: 10.1038/nphys811. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 6.Fuchs M, et al. Laser-driven soft-X-ray undulator source. Nat. Phys. 2009;5:826–829. doi: 10.1038/nphys1404. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 7.Huang Z, Kim KJ. Three-dimensional analysis of harmonic generation in high-gain free-electron lasers. Phys. Rev. E. 2000;62:7295–7308. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevE.62.7295. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 8.Nakajima K. Compact X-ray sources: Towards a table-top free-electron laser. Nat. Phys. 2008;4:92–93. doi: 10.1038/nphys846. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 9.Grüner F, et al. Design considerations for table-top, laser-based VUV and X-ray free electron lasers. Appl. Phys. B. 2007;86:431–435. doi: 10.1007/s00340-006-2565-7. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 10.Corde S, et al. Femtosecond X-rays from laser-plasma accelerators. Rev. Mod. Phys. 2013;85:1–48. doi: 10.1103/RevModPhys.85.1. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 11.Guenot D, et al. Relativistic electron beams driven by kHz single-cycle light pulses. Nat. Photonics. 2017;11:293–296. doi: 10.1038/nphoton.2017.46. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 12.Schroeder CB, Esarey E, Geddes CGR, Benedetti C, Leemans WP. Physics considerations for laser-plasma linear colliders. Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams. 2010;13:101301. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.13.101301. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 13.Malka V, et al. Electron acceleration by a wake field forced by an intense ultrashort laser pulse. Science. 2002;298:1596–1600. doi: 10.1126/science.1076782. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 14.Esarey E, Schroeder CB, Leemans WP. Physics of laser-driven plasma-based electron accelerators. Rev. Mod. Phys. 2009;81:1229–1285. doi: 10.1103/RevModPhys.81.1229. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 15.Malka V. Laser plasma accelerators. Phys. Plasmas. 2012;19:055501. doi: 10.1063/1.3695389. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 16.Kalmykov S, Yi SA, Khudik V, Shvets G. Electron self-injection and trapping into an evolving plasma bubble. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2009;103:135004. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.103.135004. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 17.Corde S, et al. Observation of longitudinal and transverse self-injections in laser-plasma accelerators. Nat. Commun. 2013;4:1501. doi: 10.1038/ncomms2528. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 18.Faure J, et al. Controlled injection and acceleration of electrons in plasma wakefields by colliding laser pulses. Nature. 2006;444:737–739. doi: 10.1038/nature05393. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 19.Rechatin C, et al. Observation of beam loading in a laser-plasma accelerator. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2009;103:194804. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.103.194804. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 20.Schmid K, et al. Density-transition based electron injector for laser driven wakefield accelerators. Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams. 2010;13:091301. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.13.091301. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 21.Buck A, et al. Shock-front injector for high-quality laser-plasma acceleration. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2013;110:185006. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.110.185006. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 22.Thaury C, et al. Shock assisted ionization injection in laser-plasma accelerators. Sci. Rep. 2015;5:16310. doi: 10.1038/srep16310. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 23.McGuffey C, et al. Ionization induced trapping in a laser wakefield accelerator. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2010;104:025004. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.104.025004. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 24.Pak A, et al. Injection and trapping of tunnel-ionized electrons into laser-produced wakes. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2010;104:025003. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.104.025003. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 25.Pollock BB, et al. Demonstration of a narrow energy spread, ~0.5 GeV electron beam from a two-stage laser wakefield accelerator. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2011;107:045001. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.107.045001. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 26.Golovin G, et al. Tunable monoenergetic electron beams from independently controllable laser-wakefield acceleration and injection. Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams. 2015;18:011301. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.18.011301. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 27.Döpp A, et al. Stable femtosecond X-rays with tunable polarization from a laser-driven accelerator. Light Sci. Appl. 2017;6:e17086. doi: 10.1038/lsa.2017.86. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 28.Leemans WP, et al. Multi-GeV electron beams from capillary-discharge-guided subpetawatt laser pulses in the self-trapping regime. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2014;113:245002. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.113.245002. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 29.Floettmann K. Some basic features of the beam emittance. Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams. 2003;6:034202. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.6.034202. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 30.Migliorati M, et al. Intrinsic normalized emittance growth in laser-driven electron accelerators. Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams. 2013;16:011302. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.16.011302. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 31.Antici P, et al. Laser-driven electron beamlines generated by coupling laser-plasma sources with conventional transport systems. J. Appl. Phys. 2012;112:044902. doi: 10.1063/1.4740456. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 32.Khojoyan M, et al. Transport studies of LPA electron beam towards the FEL amplification at COXINEL. Nucl. Instr. Meth. Phys. Res. A. 2016;829:260–264. doi: 10.1016/j.nima.2016.02.030. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 33.Lambert, G. et al. Progress on the generation of undulator radiation in the UV from a plasma-based electron beam. In Proc. FEL (JACOW, Nara, Japan, 2012).
  • 34.Weingartner R, et al. Ultralow emittance electron beams from a laser-wakefield accelerator. Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams. 2012;15:111302. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.15.111302. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 35.Anania MP, et al. An ultrashort pulse ultra-violet radiation undulator source driven by a laser plasma wakefield accelerator. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2014;104:264102. doi: 10.1063/1.4886997. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 36.Thaury, C. et al. Demonstration of relativistic electron beam focusing by a laser-plasma lens. Nat. Commun. 6, 6860 (2015). [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed]
  • 37.Nakanii N, et al. Transient magnetized plasma as an optical element for high power laser pulses. Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams. 2015;18:021303. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.18.021303. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 38.Hosokai T, et al. Electron energy boosting in laser-wake-field acceleration with external magnetic field B~1 T and laser prepulses. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2010;96:121501. doi: 10.1063/1.3371709. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 39.van Tilborg J, et al. Active plasma lensing for relativistic laser-plasma-accelerated electron beams. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2015;115:184802. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.115.184802. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 40.Maier A, et al. Demonstration scheme for a laser-plasma-driven free-electron laser. Phys. Rev. X. 2012;2:031019. [Google Scholar]
  • 41.Loulergue A, et al. Beam manipulation for compact laser wakefield accelerator based free-electron lasers. New J. Phys. 2015;17:023028. doi: 10.1088/1367-2630/17/2/023028. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 42.Couprie ME, Loulergue A, Labat M, Lehe R, Malka V. Towards a free electron laser based on laser plasma accelerators. J. Phys. B. 2014;47:234001. doi: 10.1088/0953-4075/47/23/234001. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 43.Huang Z, Ding Y, Schroeder CB. Compact X-ray free-electron laser from a laser-plasma accelerator using a transverse-gradient undulator. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2012;109:204801–204805. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.204801. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 44.Couprie ME, et al. An application of laser plasma acceleration: towards a free-electron laser amplification. Plasma Phys. Control. Fusion. 2016;58:034020. doi: 10.1088/0741-3335/58/3/034020. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 45.Labat M, et al. Electron and photon diagnostics for plasma acceleration based FELs. J. Synchrotron Radiat. 2018;25:59–67. doi: 10.1107/S1600577517011742. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 46.Elleaume P, Onuki H. Undulators, Wigglers and their Applications. London: Taylor and Francis; 2003. [Google Scholar]
  • 47.Anania, M.P. et al. Transport of ultra-short electron bunches in a free-electron laser driven by a laser-plasma wakefield accelerator. In SPIE Europe Optics+ Optoelectronics, p. 735916 (Prague, Czech Republic, International Society for Optics and Photonics, 2009).
  • 48.Benabderrahmane, C., Couprie, M., Forest, F., Cosson, O. Multi-pôle magnétique réglablehttp://bases-brevets.inpi.fr/fr/document/WO2016034490.html?p=5s=1492741420047cHash=da6678adbfdf5b95b568358d33c57625. WO2016034490 (2016).
  • 49.Benabderrahmane, C., Couprie, M., Forest, F., Cosson, O. Adjustable magnetic multipolehttps://patentscope.wipo.int/search/en/detail.jsf?docId=WO2016034490. Europe: PCT/EP2015/069649 of 27/08/2015, WOBL14SSOQUA / CA (2016).
  • 50.Marteau F, et al. Variable high gradient permanent magnet quadrupole (QUAPEVA) Appl. Phys. Lett. 2017;111:253503. doi: 10.1063/1.4986856. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 51.Steinke S, et al. Multistage coupling of independent laser-plasma accelerators. Nature. 2016;530:190–193. doi: 10.1038/nature16525. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 52.Chubar O, Elleaume P, Chavanne J. A three-dimensional magnetostatics computer code for insertion devices. J. Synchr. Rad. 1998;5:481–484. doi: 10.1107/S0909049597013502. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 53.Simkin, J., Trowbridge, C. Three-dimensional nonlinear electromagnetic field computations, using scalar potentials. In IEE Proc. B-Electric Power Applications, Vol. 127, pp. 368–374 (IET, 1980).
  • 54.Halbach K. Conceptual design of a permanent quadrupole magnet with adjustable strength. Nucl. Instr. Meth. Phys. Res. 1983;206:353–354. doi: 10.1016/0167-5087(83)90368-X. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 55.Le Bec G, Chavanne J, Penel C. Stretched wire measurement of multipole accelerator magnets. Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams. 2012;15:022401. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.15.022401. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 56.Madur, A. Contribution à la métrologie magnétique des multipôles d’accélérateurs: les quadrupôles du Synchroton SOLEIL. PhD thesis, Vandoeuvre-les-Nancy, INPL (2006).
  • 57.Preston DW, Warren RW. Wiggler field measurements and corrections using the pulsed wire technique. Nucl. Instr. Meth. Phys. Res. A. 1992;318:794–797. doi: 10.1016/0168-9002(92)91160-B. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 58.Keil, B. et al. Design of the SwissFEL BPM system. In Proc. IBIC2013 (JACOW, Oxford, UK, 2013).
  • 59.Glinec Y, et al. Absolute calibration for a broad range single shot electron spectrometer. Rev. Sci. Instrum. 2006;77:103301. doi: 10.1063/1.2360988. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 60.Buck A, et al. Absolute charge calibration of scintillating screens for relativistic electron detection. Rev. Sci. Instrum. 2010;81:033301. doi: 10.1063/1.3310275. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 61.Nakamura K, et al. Electron beam charge diagnostics for laser plasma accelerators. Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams. 2011;14:062801. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.14.062801. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 62.Payet, J., et al. BETA code. CEA, SACLAY http://irfu.cea.fr/Sacm/logiciels/index6.php.
  • 63.Flöttmann, K. A space charge tracking algorithm. ASTRAURL http://www.desy.de/mpyflo/ (2007)
  • 64.Borland, Ml. Elegant: A flexible SDDS-compliant code for accelerator simulation. No. LS-287. Argonne National Lab., IL (US), (2000).
  • 65.Agapov I, Geloni G, Tomin S, Zagorodnov I. OCELOT: a software framework for synchrotron light source and FELstudies. Nucl. Instr. Meth. Phys. Res. A. 2014;768:151–156. doi: 10.1016/j.nima.2014.09.057. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 66.Flöttmann K. Adiabatic matching section for plasma accelerated beams. Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams. 2014;17:054402. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.17.054402. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 67.Flöttmann K. Some basic features of the beam emittance. Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams. 2003;6:034202. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.6.034202. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 68.Brown, K. SLAC Report 75 (SLAC, 1972).
  • 69.Madur, A., Brunelle, P., Nadji, A., Nadolski, L. Beam based alignment for the storage ring multipoles of synchrotron SOLEIL. In Proc. of the EPAC2006 (JACOW, Edinburg, Scotland, 2006).
  • 70.Emma P, Carr R, Nuhn HD. Beam-based alignment for the LCLS FEL undulator. Nucl. Instr. Meth. Phys. Res. A. 1999;429:407–413. doi: 10.1016/S0168-9002(99)00117-5. [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  • 71.Boris, J. Relativistic plasma simulation-optimization of a hybrid code. In Proc., Fourth Conference on the Numerical Simulation of Plasma (Washington D.C., USA, 1970).
  • 72.Jackson, J.D. Classical Electrodynamics 3rd edn (Wiley, New York, 1998).
  • 73.Chubar, O., Elleaume, P. Accurate and efficient computation of synchrotron radiation in the near field region. In Proc. of the EPAC98 (JACOW, Stockholm, Sweden, 1998).
  • 74.Andriyash, I. COXINELModelingTools. https://github.com/COXINELModelingTools (2017).

Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Supplementary Materials

Peer Review File (462.5KB, pdf)

Data Availability Statement

The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding authors upon reasonable request.


Articles from Nature Communications are provided here courtesy of Nature Publishing Group

RESOURCES