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Gain Computation Sven Reiche, UCLA April 24, 2002

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Presentation on theme: "Gain Computation Sven Reiche, UCLA April 24, 2002"— Presentation transcript:

1 Gain Computation Sven Reiche, UCLA April 24, 2002
Tools for gain computation The LCLS parameter space Start-end simulations LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

2 Tools Fully Developed Theory Analytical Formulae
Impact of Beam Parameters (Energy Spread, Emittance, Beam Size, Detuning) Diffraction of Radiation Field (3D Theory) Shot Noise, Slippage, Short Bunch (Time-Dependent Theory) Analytical Formulae Gain length, shot noise, saturation power and length as a function of electron beam , undulator and radiation field parameters. Spread sheet calculation / estimate of FEL performance LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

3 Harmonics, Undulator field maps
Tools FEL Codes Code Non-linear Time-dependent Radiation field Additional features GINGER yes 2D no GENESIS 1.3 3D Wakefields, Spon. rad. MEDUSA Harmonics, Undulator field maps RON LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

4 Tools Codes for Start-end Simulations Parmela Elegant Genesis 1.3 Gun
Linac FEL Parmela Elegant Genesis 1.3 Macro particles and Discritized radiation field Analytical model for undulator wakefields Macro particles External maps for E- and B-field Space Charge Macro particles Tracking by matrix elements Analytical model for CSR and wakefields LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

5 LCLS Parameter Space Design Parameters
Energy 14.3 GeV 4.5 GeV Current 3.4 kA Charge 1 nC Emittance 1.2 mm mrad Energy Spread % % Undulator Period 3 cm Undulator Parameter 3.7 b-function 18 m 7.5 m Wavelength 1.5 Å 15 Å Lowering the charge reduces bunch length, current and emittance (start-end simulation) 1.0 nC strong wakefields Charge losses due to spon. rad. Operation Space deep saturation 0.2 nC 1.5 Å Wavelength 15 Å LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

6 Performance Limitations
Spontaneous Radiation Energy loss due to spontaneous radiation. Weak taper of undulator field to compensate change in resonance condition Quantum fluctuation of hard X-rays increases energy spread. No compensation possible ! Spon. rad. FEL process FEL process Quantum fluctuation LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

7 Performance Limitations
Undulator Wakefields Caused by wall resistivity, surface roughness, changes in aperture. Resistive wall wakefields are the dominant contribution to the total wake potential. Larger undulator gap does not increase output power but the saturation length! Current Profile Wake Potential Without wakefields With wakefields LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

8 Beam Quality Issues If magnitude of correlated energy spread is larger than the FEL bandwidth, the frequency spectrum is broader. The matching of the projected phase space ellipse to the focusing lattice causes a mismatch and misalignment along the bunch. Wakefields have a ‘local’ effect, resulting in a position-dependent change in energy, which cannot be compensated by tapering. Slippage length, over which beam information is transported via the radiation field, is 500 nm. Many parts of the bunch amplify the spontaneous radiation independent of each other. Beam quality is better parameterized by sliced values than projected ones. LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

9 Beam Quality Issues The longitudinal variation of the electron beam quantities has to be estimated and used as input for FEL simulation. Therefore modeling the LCLS FEL performance requires: Input from consistent simulations of the LCLS beam line (start-end simulations) Further improvement can be achieved by comparison with measurable quantities such as Autocorrelation Fluctuation in FEL output power Characteristics of spikes in frequency spectrum Slicing by applying energy chirp to electron beam Consistency with non-FEL measurement (e.g. bunch length) LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

10 General Performance The most critical parameter is the transverse emittance. A large emittance corresponds to a large spread in transverse and, thus, longitudinal velocity. The effective number of electrons, which are in resonance with the radiation field, is significantly reduced. The emittance effects dominate over the energy spread, which also causes a spread in longitudinal motion. 1.7 mm.mrad is the largest slice emittance, which allows saturation within the LCLS Undulator (120 m, including gaps between modules), assuming a local current of 3.4 kA. LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

11 General Performance The variation of the beam parameters
along the electron bunch causes different saturation powers and length for each slice. Beside emittance, energy spread and b-mismatch have the stron- gest impact on the FEL performance. Despite a variation in the beam para- meters, transverse coherence is achieved after approx. 45 m for the 1.5 Å case. Full longitudinal coherence is never obtained. LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

12 All cases reach saturation
Expected Performance Start-end simulation using PARMELA-ELEGANT-GENESIS 1.3 4 cases (1nC and 0.2 nC at 1.5 Å and 15 Å) Low charge cases are modeled in PARMELA after the GTF results and then imported into ELEGENT for the transport through the LCLS beam line. The simulations includes: Space charge in the gun Emittance compensation Wakefield and CSR effects Optimized beam transport (Jitter) Spontaneous Undulator Radiation All cases reach saturation LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

13 Expected Performance Impact of Wakefields
Large wake amplitude due to spikes in the current profile at the beginning and end of the electron bunch. Stronger at 1.5 Å: Smaller bandwidth Longer accumulation Power reduction at undulator exit 15 GeV - 1nC 35 % 15 GeV nC 5 GeV - 1 nC 7 % 5 GeV nC 15 % LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

14 Large Bunching Factor = Richer Harmonic Content
Expected Performance Microbunching + Higher Harmonics Overall efficiency of microbunching reduced for 1.5 Å cases. The modulation of the microbunchng at higher harmonics is rather driven by the non-linear terms of the interaction with the fundamental radiation wavelength then the interaction with the higher harmonics of the radiation wavelength. Large Bunching Factor = Richer Harmonic Content LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

15 Expected Performance Power Profile
Profile similar for entire wavelength range. Gaps in profile due to Undulator wakes Large emittance Large energy spread LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

16 Expected Performance Spectrum at 1.5 Å
Spectrum shows a slight shift towards longer wavelength due to the net energy loss by the wakefields. Low charge case is less effected by wakefields, thus, showing a shorter resonant frequency. The RMS widths of the spectra are 0.13% and 0.07% for the high and low charge case, respectively. LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

17 Expected Performance Spectrum at 1.5 nm
The operation in deep saturation causes the growth of the sideband instabilitiy and a reduction at the resonant wavelength. It can be compensated by a low current, but The FEL growth would stronger be affected by the undulator taper and wakefields The spectral power at resonance frequency is not higher. LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

18 Analysis of Measurements
Start-end simulation used to analyse the results from the VISA FEL experiment (850 nm). Compression and ‘clipping’ in the transport from the linac to the entrance of the 4 m undulator. Energy 71 MeV Spread 0.1 % Peak Current 250 A Emittance (projected) 2.3 mm.mrad Undulator period 1.8 cm Undulator parameter 0.88 After Linac Before Undulator LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

19 Analysis of Measurements
Results agree well with measured data Energy value and fluctuation Near and far field distribution Spectrum width and # spikes Measured angular profile GENESIS simulations LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA

20 All four cases reach saturation
Conclusion FEL performance is defined by ‘sliced’ beam parameters. Beam transport and compression can introduce a strong variation of the beam parameters along the bunch. Wakefields and quantum fluctuation of the spontaneous radiation degrades FEL performance. Importance of start-end simulations Start-end codes PARMELA, ELEGANT and GENESIS 1.3 successfully benchmarked against VISA experiment. All four cases reach saturation LCLS DOE Review, April 24, 2002 Sven Reiche, UCLA


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