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M.C. Ross

Other affiliations: Fermilab
Bio: M.C. Ross is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Particle accelerator & Beam (structure). The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 115 publications receiving 2872 citations. Previous affiliations of M.C. Ross include Fermilab.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Wolfgang Ackermann1, G. Asova, Valeri Ayvazyan2, A. Azima2  +154 moreInstitutions (16)
TL;DR: In this paper, the performance of a free-electron laser operating at a wavelength of 13.7 nm where unprecedented peak and average powers for a coherent extreme-ultraviolet radiation source have been measured.
Abstract: We report results on the performance of a free-electron laser operating at a wavelength of 13.7 nm where unprecedented peak and average powers for a coherent extreme-ultraviolet radiation source have been measured. In the saturation regime, the peak energy approached 170 J for individual pulses, and the average energy per pulse reached 70 J. The pulse duration was in the region of 10 fs, and peak powers of 10 GW were achieved. At a pulse repetition frequency of 700 pulses per second, the average extreme-ultraviolet power reached 20 mW. The output beam also contained a significant contribution from odd harmonics of approximately 0.6% and 0.03% for the 3rd (4.6 nm) and the 5th (2.75 nm) harmonics, respectively. At 2.75 nm the 5th harmonic of the radiation reaches deep into the water window, a wavelength range that is crucially important for the investigation of biological samples.

1,390 citations

DOI
01 Jan 2006
TL;DR: In this article, the authors dealt with TTF/FLASH in the XFEL context, general layout of the X-FEL facility, the X FEL accelerator, undulators for SAES and spontaneous emission, infrastructure and auxiliary systems, commissioning and operation, project management and organization, cost and time schedule.
Abstract: The following topics are dealt with: TTF/FLASH in the XFEL context, general layout of the XFEL facility, the XFEL accelerator, undulators for SAES and spontaneous emission, photon beamlines and scientific instruments, infrastructure and auxiliary systems, commissioning and operation, project management and organization, cost and time schedule. (HSI)

445 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Valeri Ayvazyan, N. Baboi, J. Bähr, V. Balandin, B. Beutner1, Andrew Brandt, I. Bohnet, A. Bolzmann, R. Brinkmann, O. I. Brovko2, Jean-Paul Carneiro, S. Casalbuoni, M. Castellano, P. Castro, L. Catani, Enrica Chiadroni, S. Choroba, Alessandro Cianchi, H. Delsim-Hashemi1, G. Di Pirro, Martin Dohlus, S. Düsterer, H. T. Edwards3, Bart Faatz, A.A. Fateev2, Josef Feldhaus, Klaus Flöttmann, Josef Frisch4, L. Fröhlich1, T. Garvey5, U. Gensch, N. Golubeva, H.-J. Grabosch, Bagrat Grigoryan6, O. Grimm, U. Hahn, J.H. Han, M.v. Hartrott, K. Honkavaara1, M. Hüning, Rasmus Ischebeck, E. Jaeschke, M. Jablonka, R. Kammering, V. Katalev, B. Keitel, Sergiy Khodyachykh, Y. Kim, Vitali Kocharyan, M. Körfer, M. Kollewe, D. Kostin, D. Krämer, Mikhail Krassilnikov, G. Kube, L. Lilje, T. Limberg, Dirk Lipka, Florian Löhl1, M. Luong, C. Magne, J. Menzel, Paolo Michelato, Velizar Miltchev, M. Minty, W.-D. Möller, Laura Monaco, Wolfgang Franz Otto Müller7, M. Nagl, Olivier Napoly, Piergiorgio Nicolosi8, Dirk Nölle, T. Nunez, Anne Oppelt, Carlo Pagani, R. Paparella, Brian Petersen, Bagrat Petrosyan, J. Pflüger, Philippe Piot3, Elke Plönjes, Luca Poletto8, D. Proch, D. Pugachov, K. Rehlich, D. Richter, Sabine Riemann, M.C. Ross4, Jörg Rossbach1, M. Sachwitz, E.L. Saldin, Wolfgang Sandner, Holger Schlarb, Boris Schmidt, M. Schmitz, Peter Schmüser1, J. Schneider, Evgeny Schneidmiller, H. J. Schreiber, Siegfried Schreiber, A. Shabunov2, Daniele Sertore, Stefan Setzer7, S. Simrock, E. Sombrowski, L. Staykov, B. Steffen, Frank Stephan, F. Stulle, K. P. Sytchev2, H. Thom, Kai Tiedtke, M. Tischer, Rolf Treusch, D. Trines, I. Tsakov, Ashot Vardanyan6, Rainer Wanzenberg, Thomas Weiland7, H. Weise, M. Wendt, Ingo Will, A. Winter, K. Wittenburg, Mikhail Yurkov, Igor Zagorodnov7, P. Zambolin8, K. Zapfe 
TL;DR: In this paper, the first successful operation of an FEL at a wavelength of 32 nm, with ultra-short pulses (25 fs FWHM), a peak power at the Gigawatt level, and a high degree of transverse and longitudinal coherence.
Abstract: Many scientific disciplines ranging from physics, chemistry and biology to material sciences, geophysics and medical diagnostics need a powerful X-ray source with pulse lengths in the femtosecond range [1-4]. This would allow, for example, time-resolved observation of chemical reactions with atomic resolution. Such radiation of extreme intensity, and tunable over a wide range of wavelengths, can be accomplished using high-gain free-electron lasers (FEL) [5-10]. Here we present results of the first successful operation of an FEL at a wavelength of 32 nm, with ultra-short pulses (25 fs FWHM), a peak power at the Gigawatt level, and a high degree of transverse and longitudinal coherence. The experimental data are in full agreement with theory. This is the shortest wavelength achieved with an FEL to date and an important milestone towards a user facility designed for wavelengths down to 6 nm. With a peak brilliance exceeding the state-of-the-art of synchrotron radiation sources [4] by seven orders of magnitude, this device opens a new field of experiments, and it paves the way towards sources with even shorter wavelengths, such as the Linac Coherent Light Source [3] at Stanford, USA, and the European X-ray Free Electron Laser Facility [4] in Hamburg, Germany.

353 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
16 May 2005
TL;DR: A 60 cm-long traveling-wave structure with low group velocity and 150 degree per cell phase advance is proposed in this paper, which has an average iris size that produces an acceptable short-range wakefield, and dipole mode damping and detuning that adequately suppresses the long range wakefield.
Abstract: During the past five years, there has been an concerted program at SLAC and KEK to develop accelerator structures that meet the high gradient (65 MV/m) performance requirements for the Next Linear Collider (NLC) and Global Linear Collider (GLC) initiatives. The design that resulted is a 60-cm-long, traveling-wave structure with low group velocity and 150 degree per cell phase advance. It has an average iris size that produces an acceptable short-range wakefield, and dipole mode damping and detuning that adequately suppresses the long-range wakefield. More than eight such structures have operated at a 60 Hz repetition rate over 1000 hours at 65 MV/m with 400 ns long pulses, and have reached breakdown rate levels below the limit for the linear collider. Moreover, the structures are robust in that the rates continue to decrease over time, and if the structures are briefly exposed to air, the rates recover to their low levels within a few days. This paper presents a summary of the results from this program, which effectively ended last August with the selection of ‘cold’ technology for an International Linear Collider (ILC).

51 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Experimental results from the ATF2 accelerator at KEK are presented that validate the operating principle of a novel scheme for the focusing of high-energy leptons in future linear colliders by demonstrating the demagnification of a 1.3 GeV electron beam down to below 65 nm in height using an energy-scaled version of the compact focusing optics designed for the ILC collider.
Abstract: A novel scheme for the focusing of high-energy leptons in future linear colliders was proposed in 2001 [ P. Raimondi and A. Seryi , Phys. Rev. Lett. 86 , 3779 ( 2001 ) ]. This scheme has many advantageous properties over previously studied focusing schemes, including being significantly shorter for a given energy and having a significantly better energy bandwidth. Experimental results from the ATF2 accelerator at KEK are presented that validate the operating principle of such a scheme by demonstrating the demagnification of a 1.3 GeV electron beam down to below 65 nm in height using an energy-scaled version of the compact focusing optics designed for the ILC collider.

51 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Linac Coherent Light Source free-electron laser has achieved coherent X-ray generation down to a wavelength of 1.2 A and at a brightness that is nearly ten orders of magnitude higher than conventional synchrotrons.
Abstract: The Linac Coherent Light Source free-electron laser has now achieved coherent X-ray generation down to a wavelength of 1.2 A and at a brightness that is nearly ten orders of magnitude higher than conventional synchrotrons. Researchers detail the first operation and beam characteristics of the system, which give hope for imaging at atomic spatial and temporal scales.

2,648 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: While the book is a standard fixture in most chemical and physical laboratories, including those in medical centers, it is not as frequently seen in the laboratories of physician's offices (those either in solo or group practice), and I believe that the Handbook can be useful in those laboratories.
Abstract: There is a special reason for reviewing this book at this time: it is the 50th edition of a compendium that is known and used frequently in most chemical and physical laboratories in many parts of the world. Surely, a publication that has been published for 56 years, withstanding the vagaries of science in this century, must have had something to offer. There is another reason: while the book is a standard fixture in most chemical and physical laboratories, including those in medical centers, it is not as frequently seen in the laboratories of physician's offices (those either in solo or group practice). I believe that the Handbook can be useful in those laboratories. One of the reasons, among others, is that the various basic items of information it offers may be helpful in new tests, either physical or chemical, which are continuously being published. The basic information may relate

2,493 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the SPring-8 Angstrom Compact Free-Electron Laser (CFEL) was used for sub-angstrom fundamental-wavelength lasing at the Tokyo National Museum.
Abstract: Researchers report sub-angstrom fundamental-wavelength lasing at the SPring-8 Angstrom Compact Free-Electron Laser in Japan. The output has a maximum power of more than 10 GW, a pulse duration of 10−14 s and a lasing wavelength of 0.634 A.

1,467 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Wolfgang Ackermann1, G. Asova, Valeri Ayvazyan2, A. Azima2  +154 moreInstitutions (16)
TL;DR: In this paper, the performance of a free-electron laser operating at a wavelength of 13.7 nm where unprecedented peak and average powers for a coherent extreme-ultraviolet radiation source have been measured.
Abstract: We report results on the performance of a free-electron laser operating at a wavelength of 13.7 nm where unprecedented peak and average powers for a coherent extreme-ultraviolet radiation source have been measured. In the saturation regime, the peak energy approached 170 J for individual pulses, and the average energy per pulse reached 70 J. The pulse duration was in the region of 10 fs, and peak powers of 10 GW were achieved. At a pulse repetition frequency of 700 pulses per second, the average extreme-ultraviolet power reached 20 mW. The output beam also contained a significant contribution from odd harmonics of approximately 0.6% and 0.03% for the 3rd (4.6 nm) and the 5th (2.75 nm) harmonics, respectively. At 2.75 nm the 5th harmonic of the radiation reaches deep into the water window, a wavelength range that is crucially important for the investigation of biological samples.

1,390 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the FLASH soft X-ray free-electron laser was used to reconstruct a coherent diffraction pattern from a nano-structured nonperiodic object, before destroying it at 60,000 K.
Abstract: Theory predicts that with an ultrashort and extremely bright coherent X-ray pulse, a single diffraction pattern may be recorded from a large macromolecule, a virus, or a cell before the sample explodes and turns into a plasma. Here we report the first experimental demonstration of this principle using the FLASH soft X-ray free-electron laser. An intense 25 fs, 4 x 10{sup 13} W/cm{sup 2} pulse, containing 10{sup 12} photons at 32 nm wavelength, produced a coherent diffraction pattern from a nano-structured non-periodic object, before destroying it at 60,000 K. A novel X-ray camera assured single photon detection sensitivity by filtering out parasitic scattering and plasma radiation. The reconstructed image, obtained directly from the coherent pattern by phase retrieval through oversampling, shows no measurable damage, and extends to diffraction-limited resolution. A three-dimensional data set may be assembled from such images when copies of a reproducible sample are exposed to the beam one by one.

957 citations