Peter Ungelenk
Technical University of Dortmund
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Synchrotron Radiation News | 2013
Shaukat Khan; Fin Bahnsen; S. Cramm; Sven Döring; Justin Grewe; Markus Höner; Holger Huck; Maryam Huck; Robert Molo; Lukasz Plucinski; Andreas Schick; Claus M. Schneider; Peter Ungelenk
Pump-probe experiments to study ultrafast dynamic phenomena such as electron transfer, lattice vibrations, phase transitions, chemical reactions, or spin dynamics require two short radiation pulses as well as good control of the time delay between them. The first pulse to excite (“pump”) the sample under study is usually a femtosecond laser pulse in the near-visible regime. For the second pulse to analyze (“probe”) the state of the sample as a function of the delay, however, light with shorter and tunable wavelength would be desirable. Conventional synchrotron light sources produce pulses with a typical duration of 30–100 ps (FWHM), given by the electron bunch length in a storage ring, which is not well suited for ultrafast studies. The bunch length can be reduced to a few picoseconds in the so-called low-α mode (e.g., [1]) by lowering the momentum compaction factor α of the storage ring. Radiation pulses in the femtosecond range, however, are obtained more easily by extracting synchrotron light from a small fraction of the electron distribution, rather than the whole bunch, which can be achieved with the laser-based methods described below.
Synchrotron Radiation News | 2011
Shaukat Khan; Mohammed Bakr; Markus Höner; Holger Huck; Robert Molo; Andre Nowaczyk; Andreas Schick; Peter Ungelenk; Maryam Zeinalzadeh
Synchrotron radiation sources producing high-brilliance radiation with tunable wavelength in the VUV to X-ray regime are ideally suited to study the structure of matter on the atomic scale. With a pulse duration of typically 30-100 ps (FWHM), however, they cannot resolve dynamic phenomena such as lattice vibrations, phase transitions, chemical reactions, or fast magnetization changes. Mode-locked lasers, on the other hand, produce intense pulses with a duration below 100 fs, but only at near-visible wavelengths. In the quest for short pulse duration and short wavelength, good progress has been made. High harmonic generation (HHG) or X-rays from a laser-generated plasma have become standard techniques in many laser laboratories. Linac-based free-electron lasers (FELs) have reached the Ångström wavelength regime, a pulse duration of a few femtoseconds, and unprecedented peak brilliance [1]. As for conventional synchrotron light sources, pulses of a few picoseconds can be produced by lowering the momentum compaction factor and thus reducing the bunch length (see e.g. [2]). Even shorter pulses are obtained by combining electron bunches with femtosecond laser pulses.
5th Int. Particle Accelerator Conf. (IPAC'14), Dresden, Germany, June 15-20, 2014 | 2014
Markus Höner; Svenja Hilbrich; Holger Huck; Maryam Huck; Shaukat Khan; Carsten Mai; Arne Meyer auf der Heide; Robert Molo; Helge Rast; Malte Sommer; Peter Ungelenk
At the 1.5-GeV electron storage ring DELTA operated by the TU Dortmund University as a synchrotron radiation user facility, bunch-by-bunch feedback systems are in use for electron beam diagnostics and for the suppression of multibunch instabilities. An automatic readout of bunch position data allows a real-time modal analysis during machine operation. An excitation of particular multibunch modes enables the determination of growth and damping times for all modes independently. Further investigations of beam stability and natural damping times of all modes even below the instability threshold have been performed. In addition, first bunch-by-bunch data taken from the booster synchrotron are shown.
Physical review accelerators and beams | 2017
Peter Ungelenk; Markus Höner; Holger Huck; Shaukat Khan; Carsten Mai; A. Meyer auf der Heide; C. Evain; Christophe Szwaj; Serge Bielawski
5th International Particle Accelerator Conference (IPAC 2014), Dresden, 15. -20. Juni 2014 | 2014
Peter Ungelenk; Serge Bielawski; Lukas-Georg Böttger; C. Evain; Svenja Hilbrich; N. Hiller; Holger Huck; Maryam Huck; Markus Höner; Vitali Judin; Shaukat Khan; Marc Le Parquier; Carsten Mai; Arne Meyer auf der Heide; Robert Molo; Juliane Raasch; Helge Rast; Eléonore Roussel; Andreas Schick; Christophe Szwaj; Petra Thoma
Archive | 2012
Peter Ungelenk; M.Bakr; H.Huck; M.Höner; S.Khan; R.Molo; A.Nowaczyk; A.Schick; M.Zeinalzadeh
7th International Particle Accelerator Conference (IPAC'16), Busan, Korea, May 8-13, 2016 | 2016
Shaukat Khan; Fin Bahnsen; Max Bolsinger; Fabian Götz; Svenja Hilbrich; Marc Jebramcik; Nils Lockmann; Carsten Mai; Arne Meyer auf der Heide; Raffael Niemczyk; Gholamreza Shayeganrad; Peter Ungelenk; Dennis Zimmermann
Archive | 2013
Peter Ungelenk; Markus Höner; Holger Huck; Maryam Huck; Shaukat Khan; Robert Molo; Andreas Schick; N. Hiller; V. Judin
Archive | 2018
Shaukat Khan; Peter Ungelenk; Carsten Mai; Nils Maris Lockmann; Mateusz Suski; Bernard Riemann; Benedikt Büsing; Raffael Niemczyk; Boris Sawadski; Arne Meyer auf der Heide
7th Int. Particle Accelerator Conf. (IPAC'16), Busan, Korea, May 8-13, 2016 | 2016
Marc Jebramcik; Fin Bahnsen; Max Bolsinger; Svenja Hilbrich; Markus Höner; Shaukat Khan; Carsten Mai; Arne Meyer auf der Heide; Robert Molo; Gholamreza Shayeganrad; Peter Ungelenk