G. Gaio
Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste
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Publication
Featured researches published by G. Gaio.
Nature Photonics | 2012
E. Allaria; Roberto Appio; L.Badano; William A. Barletta; S.Bassanese; S. G. Biedron; A.O.Borga; E.Busetto; D. Castronovo; Paolo Cinquegrana; S. Cleva; D.Cocco; M.Cornacchia; P. Craievich; Ivan Cudin; G.D'Auria; M.Dal Forno; M.B. Danailov; R.De Monte; G.De Ninno; Paolo Delgiusto; Alexander Demidovich; S. Di Mitri; B. Diviacco; Alessandro Fabris; Riccardo Fabris; William M. Fawley; Mario Ferianis; Eugenio Ferrari; S.Ferry
Researchers demonstrate the FERMI free-electron laser operating in the high-gain harmonic generation regime, allowing high stability, transverse and longitudinal coherence and polarization control.
Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015
E. Allaria; L. Badano; S. Bassanese; Flavio Capotondi; D. Castronovo; Paolo Cinquegrana; M.B. Danailov; G. D'Auria; Alexander Demidovich; R. De Monte; G. De Ninno; S. Di Mitri; B. Diviacco; William M. Fawley; Mario Ferianis; Eugenio Ferrari; G. Gaio; D. Gauthier; L. Giannessi; F. Iazzourene; Gabor Kurdi; N. Mahne; I. Nikolov; F. Parmigiani; G. Penco; Lorenzo Raimondi; P. Rebernik; Fabio Rossi; Eléonore Roussel; C. Scafuri
FERMI is a seeded free-electron laser (FEL) facility located at the Elettra laboratory in Trieste, Italy, and is now in user operation with its first FEL line, FEL-1, covering the wavelength range between 100 and 20 nm. The second FEL line, FEL-2, a high-gain harmonic generation double-stage cascade covering the wavelength range 20-4 nm, has also completed commissioning and the first user call has been recently opened. An overview of the typical operating modes of the facility is presented.
Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015
C. Masciovecchio; Andrea Battistoni; Erika Giangrisostomi; Filippo Bencivenga; Emiliano Principi; Riccardo Mincigrucci; Riccardo Cucini; Alessandro Gessini; Francesco D'Amico; Roberto Borghes; Milan Prica; Valentina Chenda; Martin Scarcia; G. Gaio; Gabor Kurdi; Alexander Demidovich; M.B. Danailov; Andrea Di Cicco; Adriano Filipponi; R. Gunnella; Keisuke Hatada; N. Mahne; Lorenzo Raimondi; Cristian Svetina; Roberto Godnig; A. Abrami; Marco Zangrando
The Elastic and Inelastic Scattering (EIS) beamline at the free-electron laser FERMI is presented. It consists of two separate end-stations: EIS-TIMEX, dedicated to ultrafast time-resolved studies of matter under extreme and metastable conditions, and EIS-TIMER, dedicated to time-resolved spectroscopy of mesoscopic dynamics in condensed matter. The scientific objectives are discussed and the instrument layout illustrated, together with the results from first exemplifying experiments.
Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2016
Filippo Bencivenga; Marco Zangrando; Cristian Svetina; A. Abrami; Andrea Battistoni; Roberto Borghes; Flavio Capotondi; Riccardo Cucini; Francesco Dallari; M.B. Danailov; Alexander Demidovich; Claudio Fava; G. Gaio; Simone Gerusina; Alessandro Gessini; Fabio Giacuzzo; Riccardo Gobessi; Roberto Godnig; Riccardo Grisonich; M. Kiskinova; Gabor Kurdi; Giorgio Loda; Marco Lonza; N. Mahne; Michele Manfredda; Riccardo Mincigrucci; Gianpiero Pangon; Pietro Parisse; Roberto Passuello; Emanuele Pedersoli
The recent advent of free-electron laser (FEL) sources is driving the scientific community to extend table-top laser research to shorter wavelengths adding elemental selectivity and chemical state specificity. Both a compact setup (mini-TIMER) and a separate instrument (EIS-TIMER) dedicated to four-wave-mixing (FWM) experiments has been designed and constructed, to be operated as a branch of the Elastic and Inelastic Scattering beamline: EIS. The FWM experiments that are planned at EIS-TIMER are based on the transient grating approach, where two crossed FEL pulses create a controlled modulation of the sample excitations while a third time-delayed pulse is used to monitor the dynamics of the excited state. This manuscript describes such experimental facilities, showing the preliminary results of the commissioning of the EIS-TIMER beamline, and discusses original experimental strategies being developed to study the dynamics of matter at the fs-nm time-length scales. In the near future such experimental tools will allow more sophisticated FEL-based FWM applications, that also include the use of multiple and multi-color FEL pulses.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2013
Cristian Svetina; N. Mahne; Lorenzo Raimondi; Luca Rumiz; Marco Zangrando; E. Allaria; Filippo Bencivenga; C. Callegari; Flavio Capotondi; D. Castronovo; Paolo Cinquegrana; P. Craievich; Ivan Cudin; Massimo Dal Forno; M.B. Danailov; G.D'Auria; Raffaele De Monte; Giovanni De Ninno; Alexander Demidovich; Simone Di Mitri; B. Diviacco; Alessandro Fabris; Riccardo Fabris; William M. Fawley; Mario Ferianis; Eugenio Ferrari; Lars Froehlich; Paolo Furlan Radivo; G. Gaio; L. Giannessi
FERMI@Elettra is the first seeded VUV/soft X-ray FEL source. It is composed of two undulatory chains: the low energy branch (FELl) covering the wavelength range from 20 nm up to 100 nm, and the high energy branch (FEL2, employing a double stage cascade), covering the wavelength range from 4 nm up to 20 nm. At the end of 2012 FELl has been opened to external users while FEL2 has been turned on for the first time having demonstrated that a double cascade scheme is suitable for generating high intensity coherent FEL radiation. In this paper we will share our experience and will show our most recent results for both FERMI FELl and FEL2 sources. We will also present a brand new machine scheme that allows to perform two-colour pump and probe experiments as well as the first experimental results.
PROCEEDINGS OF THE 12TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SYNCHROTRON RADIATION INSTRUMENTATION – SRI2015 | 2016
E. Allaria; L.Badano; Filippo Bencivenga; C. Callegari; Flavio Capotondi; D. Castronovo; Paolo Cinquegrana; Marcello Coreno; Riccardo Cucini; Ivan Cudin; M.B. Danailov; Gerardo D’Auria; Raffaele De Monte; Giovanni De Ninno; Paolo Delgiusto; Alexander Demidovich; Simone Di Mitri; B. Diviacco; Alessandro Fabris; Riccardo Fabris; William M. Fawley; Mario Ferianis; Eugenio Ferrari; Paola Finetti; Paolo Furlan Radivo; G. Gaio; David Gauthier; Federico Gelmetti; L. Giannessi; Fatma Iazzourene
The FERMI Free Electron Laser (FEL) in Trieste, Italy operates in the extreme ultraviolet and soft x rays (EUV-SXR) wavelength range delivering high-fluence, stable, ultra-short pulses. Its unique design based on a seeded scheme and on tunable undulators allows unprecedented control of pulse parameters such as wavelength, phase, polarization, synchronization, pulse duration and implementation of multi-color FEL schemes. Both FEL-1 and FEL-2 lines with nominal wavelength range 100–20 nm and 20–4 nm, respectively, are open to users. We report on the unique features of FERMI, in particular those that have evolved beyond the original design, and on their application to pioneering experiments. We also present the upgrades that are planned to further expand the capabilities of this unique light source.
2014 AEIT Annual Conference - From Research to Industry: The Need for a More Effective Technology Transfer (AEIT) | 2014
Stefano Cleva; Marco Cautero; Tomasz Ciesla; G. Gaio; Marco Lonza; Lorenzo Pivetta; Claudio Scafuri; P. Sigalotti; Roberto Visintini
The effective management of several distributed devices, even in real time, is one of the mandatory conditions for the design, operation and upgrade of modern particle accelerators control systems. In order to cope with the performance demanded by such plants, the existing equipment has to be continuously improved or new strategies have to be considered to overcome its limitations. The impressive capability growth of mobile and handheld devices allows moving from a traditional distributed architecture, based on complex and expensive operating nodes, to a pervasive approach based on simple and cheap embedded systems, tailored for each specific application. Such pervasive trend is further favored by the open design approach, which is becoming more and more popular as it enables designers to easily adapt an already existing board to their specific needs. In this communication a brief description of Elettra and FERMI light sources in the context of controls, diagnostics and power supplies is given. The main applications developed and successfully deployed on the accelerators and based on a commercial open design embedded board are also presented.
Scientific Reports | 2018
S. Di Mitri; A. Perucchi; N. Adhlakha; P. Di Pietro; S. Nicastro; Eléonore Roussel; S. Spampinati; M. Veronese; E. Allaria; L. Badano; Ivan Cudin; G. De Ninno; B. Diviacco; G. Gaio; D. Gauthier; Luca Giannessi; S. Lupi; G. Penco; Federica Piccirilli; P. Rebernik; C. Spezzani; M. Trovo
We demonstrate that emission of coherent transition radiation by a ∼1 GeV energy-electron beam passing through an Al foil is enhanced in intensity and extended in frequency spectral range, by the energy correlation established along the beam by coherent synchrotron radiation wakefield, in the presence of a proper electron optics in the beam delivery system. Analytical and numerical models, based on experimental electron beam parameters collected at the FERMI free electron laser (FEL), predict transition radiation with two intensity peaks at ∼0.3 THz and ∼1.5 THz, and extending up to 8.5 THz with intensity above 20 dB w.r.t. the main peak. Up to 80-µJ pulse energy integrated over the full bandwidth is expected at the source, and in agreement with experimental pulse energy measurements. By virtue of its implementation in an FEL beam dump line, this work promises dissemination of user-oriented multi-THz beamlines parasitic and self-synchronized to EUV and x-ray FELs.
New Journal of Physics | 2018
Ad Brynes; Pw Smorenburg; I Akkermans; E. Allaria; L. Badano; S Brussaard; M.B. Danailov; Alexander Demidovich; G. De Ninno; D. Gauthier; G. Gaio; S.B. van der Geer; Luca Giannessi; M.J. de Loos; Najmeh Mirian; G. Penco; P. Rebernik; Fabio Rossi; Id Setija; S. Spampinati; C. Spezzani; M. Trovo; Ph Williams; S. Di Mitri
An understanding of collective effects is of fundamental importance for the design and optimisation of the performance of modern accelerators. In particular, the design of an accelerator with strict requirements on the beam quality, such as a free electron laser (FEL), is highly dependent on a correspondence between simulation, theory and experiments in order to correctly account for the effect of coherent synchrotron radiation (CSR), and other collective effects. A traditional approach in accelerator simulation codes is to utilise an analytic one-dimensional approximation to the CSR force. We present an extension of the 1D CSR theory in order to correctly account for the CSR force at the entrance and exit of a bending magnet. A limited range of applicability to this solution - in particular, in bunches with a large transverse spot size or offset from the nominal axis - is recognised. More recently developed codes calculate the CSR effect in dispersive regions directly from the Lienard-Wiechert potentials, albeit with approximations to improve the computational time. A new module of the General Particle Tracer code was developed for simulating the effects of CSR, and benchmarked against other codes. We experimentally demonstrate departure from the commonly used 1D CSR theory for more extreme bunch length compression scenarios at the FERMI FEL facility. Better agreement is found between experimental data and the codes which account for the transverse extent of the bunch, particularly in more extreme compression scenarios.
8th International Particle Accelerator Conference | 2017
G. Penco; E. Allaria; S. Bassanese; Paolo Cinquegrana; Stefano Cleva; M.B. Danailov; Alexander Demidovich; Simone Di Mitri; Mario Ferianis; G. Gaio; D. Gauthier; Luca Giannessi; Mauro Predonzani; Fabio Rossi; Eléonore Roussel; S. Spampinati; M. Trovo
FERMI is a linac-driven free electron laser (FEL) based upon the High Gain Harmonic Generation (HGHG) scheme. In standard conditions a bunch of 700 pC of charge with sub mm-mrad emittances is accelerated to 1.2-1.5GeV in a normal conducting S-band linac and drives FEL-1 or FEL-2 undula-tor line, which lase respectively in the range 100-20nm or 20-4nm. A number of two-color schemes have been implemented at FERMI for pump/probe experiments, all consisting in making two portions of the same electron bunch lase at two different wavelengths, with a time-separation from 0 to few hundreds of fs. In order to increase the time separation to ns and tens of ns we have explored the acceleration of two inde-pendent electron bunches separated by multiple of the linac main radio-frequency period, i.e. 333ps. Measure-ments and characterization of this two-bunch mode oper-ation are presented, including trajectory control, impact of longitudinal and transverse wakefields on the trailing bunch and manipulation of the longitudinal phase space.