SLAC, RadiaBeam Build New Tool to Tweak Rainbows of X-ray Laser Light

‘Dechirper’ will give scientists more control over ‘color spectrum’ of LCLS X-ray pulses.

Written bySLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
| 3 min read
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The Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory has teamed up with Santa Monica-based RadiaBeam Systems to develop a device known as a dechirper, which will provide a new way of adjusting the range of energies within single pulses from SLAC’s X-ray laser.

The dechirper will enable scientists to narrow or broaden the spectrum of each X-ray pulse—similar to the spectrum of colors in visible light—up to four-fold. This will enhance the capabilities of experiments that use SLAC’s Linac Coherent Light Source, a DOE Office of Science User Facility, for pioneering studies in materials science, chemistry, biology and other fields.

“For many experiments it is important to use a specific X-ray energy so that we can study specific chemical elements in our samples,” says LCLS scientist William Schlotter. “The narrower the energy bandwidth, the more precisely we can study those elements.”

Tweaking the ‘Color Spectrum’ of X-ray Pulses

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