Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS April Meeting 2020
Volume 65, Number 2
Saturday–Tuesday, April 18–21, 2020; Washington D.C.
Session T02: Wilson Prize Awards SessionInvited Session Live Prize/Award Undergrad Friendly
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Sponsoring Units: DPB DPF Chair: Sergei Nagaitsev, Fermilab Room: Washington 1 |
Monday, April 20, 2020 3:30PM - 3:52PM Live |
T02.00001: Wilson Prize Seminar Invited Speaker: Bruce Carlsten The concept of phase-space manipulation to reduce a beam's rms emittance was first proposed by Bovet in 1970. The most commonly used manipulation scheme to reduce the rms emittance is emittance compensation, introduced in 1989 and present in virtually all operating electron RF gun sources. Newer schemes include the flat-beam transform and the emittance exchanger, which, together, have been proposed as a technique to partition an electron beam's phase-space volume optimally for future X-ray free-electron lasers. This talk will cover the basics of electron beam phase-space manipulation and partitioning for emittance reduction, including the difference between the beam ``slice'' emittance and the beam rms emittance, the relation between the beam rms emittance and temperature, thermalization, and two-stage partitioning concepts. [Preview Abstract] |
Monday, April 20, 2020 3:52PM - 4:14PM Live |
T02.00002: Laser Applications in X-ray Free-Electron Lasers Invited Speaker: Siqi Li Lasers have been a versatile tool in facilitating x-ray free-electron lasers in various components of the machine. At the beginning of photocathode injectors, the properties of the drive laser determine the initial distribution of the electrons. Laser heater has been widely used to modulate electron bunch energy spread in order to suppress collective instabilities arising from dispersive sections in the accelerator. Interaction between optical lasers and the electron beam can be used to manipulate the phase space of the electron bunch to produce desirable shapes in the x-ray emission. After the x-ray photons have been generated, optical lasers are used in synchronization with the x-ray pulse to study dynamics in atomic and molecular systems. Moreover, they can provide single-shot diagnosis of the x-ray pulse, such as laser streaking, to extract valuable information about the x-ray pulse itself and the dynamic system under analysis, which can be challenging to probe directly. In this talk I will discuss my research projects in laser applications in x-ray free-electron lasers. [Preview Abstract] |
Monday, April 20, 2020 4:14PM - 4:35PM Live |
T02.00003: Sakurai Dissertation Award Seminar Invited Speaker: Katelin Schultz TBD [Preview Abstract] |
Monday, April 20, 2020 4:35PM - 4:57PM Live |
T02.00004: DPB Service Award Invited Speaker: William Barletta |
Monday, April 20, 2020 4:57PM - 5:18PM Live |
T02.00005: Tanaka Dissertation Award Seminar Invited Speaker: Bjorn Scholz TBD [Preview Abstract] |
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