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Dive into the research topics where S. Di Mitri is active.

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Featured researches published by S. Di Mitri.


Nature Photonics | 2012

Highly coherent and stable pulses from the FERMI seeded free-electron laser in the extreme ultraviolet

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.


Nature Communications | 2013

Two-colour pump–probe experiments with a twin-pulse-seed extreme ultraviolet free-electron laser

E. Allaria; Filippo Bencivenga; Roberto Borghes; Flavio Capotondi; D. Castronovo; P. Charalambous; Paolo Cinquegrana; M.B. Danailov; G. De Ninno; Alexander Demidovich; S. Di Mitri; B. Diviacco; D. Fausti; William M. Fawley; Eugenio Ferrari; L. Froehlich; D. Gauthier; Alessandro Gessini; L. Giannessi; R. Ivanov; M. Kiskinova; Gabor Kurdi; B. Mahieu; N. Mahne; I. Nikolov; C. Masciovecchio; Emanuele Pedersoli; G. Penco; Lorenzo Raimondi; C. Serpico

Exploring the dynamics of matter driven to extreme non-equilibrium states by an intense ultrashort X-ray pulse is becoming reality, thanks to the advent of free-electron laser technology that allows development of different schemes for probing the response at variable time delay with a second pulse. Here we report the generation of two-colour extreme ultraviolet pulses of controlled wavelengths, intensity and timing by seeding of high-gain harmonic generation free-electron laser with multiple independent laser pulses. The potential of this new scheme is demonstrated by the time evolution of a titanium-grating diffraction pattern, tuning the two coherent pulses to the titanium M-resonance and varying their intensities. This reveals that an intense pulse induces abrupt pattern changes on a time scale shorter than hydrodynamic expansion and ablation. This result exemplifies the essential capabilities of the jitter-free multiple-colour free-electron laser pulse sequences to study evolving states of matter with element sensitivity.


Nature Photonics | 2016

Coherent control with a short-wavelength free-electron laser

Kevin C. Prince; E. Allaria; C. Callegari; Riccardo Cucini; G. De Ninno; S. Di Mitri; B. Diviacco; Enrico Ferrari; P. Finetti; D. Gauthier; L. Giannessi; N. Mahne; G. Penco; Oksana Plekan; Lorenzo Raimondi; P. Rebernik; Eléonore Roussel; Cristian Svetina; M. Trovo; M. Zangrando; M. Negro; Paolo A. Carpeggiani; Maurizio Reduzzi; Giuseppe Sansone; A N Grum-Grzhimailo; E V Gryzlova; S. I. Strakhova; Klaus Bartschat; Nicolas Douguet; Joel Venzke

Researchers demonstrate correlation of two colours (63.0 and 31.5 nm wavelengths) in a free-electron laser and control photoelectron angular distribution by adjusting phase with 3 attosecond resolution.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015

The FERMI free-electron lasers

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.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Multicolor High-Gain Free-Electron Laser Driven by Seeded Microbunching Instability.

Eléonore Roussel; E. Allaria; S. Di Mitri; M. Veronese; Enrico Ferrari; D. Gauthier; G. Penco; L. Giannessi; M.B. Danailov

Laser-heater systems are essential tools to control and optimize high-gain free-electron lasers (FELs) working in the x-ray wavelength range. Indeed, these systems induce a controllable increase of the energy spread of the electron bunch. The heating suppresses longitudinal microbunching instability which otherwise would limit the FEL performance. Here, we demonstrate that, through the action of the microbunching instability, a long-wavelength modulation of the electron beam induced by the laser heater at low energy can persist until the beam entrance into the undulators. This coherent longitudinal modulation is exploited to control the FEL spectral properties, in particular, multicolor extreme-ultraviolet FEL pulses can be generated through a frequency mixing of the modulations produced by the laser heater and the seed laser in the electron beam. We present an experimental demonstration of this novel configuration carried out at the FERMI FEL.


PACS2001. Proceedings of the 2001 Particle Accelerator Conference (Cat. No.01CH37268) | 2001

Status report on DA/spl Phi/NE

S. Guiducci; D. Alesini; G. Benedetti; S. Bertolucci; C. Biscari; R. Boni; M. Boscolo; A. Clozza; G. Delle Monache; S. Di Mitri; G. Di Pirro; A. Drago; A. Gallo; A. Ghigo; F. Marcellini; G. Mazzitelli; C. Milardi; L. Pellegrino; M. Preger; R. Ricci; C. Sanelli; F. Sgamma; F. Sannibale; Marilisa De Serio; A. Stecchi; A. Stella; C. Vaccarezza; M. Vescovi; M. Zobov; E. Perevedentsev

DA/spl Phi/NE, the Frascati LNF /spl Phi/-factory, is providing luminosity for the KLOE experiment since July 2000. A steady increase of daily integrated luminosity in KLOE has been obtained, due to interspersed machine physics studies. The main results are: increase of single bunch luminosity by reduction of the effects of nonlinear terms in the machine, background reduction, refill of the colliding beams while keeping the KLOE detector taking data and increase of stable stored current. A fraction of machine time has been used to tune luminosity and reduce background in the DEAR configuration. The luminosity delivered to DEAR was sufficient to conclude the first phase of the experiment.


Physical Review Letters | 2018

Soft X-Ray Second Harmonic Generation as an Interfacial Probe

Royce K. Lam; Sl Raj; Tod A. Pascal; C. D. Pemmaraju; Laura Foglia; Alberto Simoncig; Nicola Fabris; Paolo Miotti; Cj Hull; Anthony M. Rizzuto; Jacob W. Smith; R. Mincigrucci; C. Masciovecchio; Alessandro Gessini; E. Allaria; G. De Ninno; B. Diviacco; Eléonore Roussel; S. Spampinati; G. Penco; S. Di Mitri; M. Trovo; M.B. Danailov; Steven T. Christensen; Dimosthenis Sokaras; Tsu-Chien Weng; M. Coreno; L. Poletto; Walter S. Drisdell; David Prendergast

Nonlinear optical processes at soft x-ray wavelengths have remained largely unexplored due to the lack of available light sources with the requisite intensity and coherence. Here we report the observation of soft x-ray second harmonic generation near the carbon K edge (∼284  eV) in graphite thin films generated by high intensity, coherent soft x-ray pulses at the FERMI free electron laser. Our experimental results and accompanying first-principles theoretical analysis highlight the effect of resonant enhancement above the carbon K edge and show the technique to be interfacially sensitive in a centrosymmetric sample with second harmonic intensity arising primarily from the first atomic layer at the open surface. This technique and the associated theoretical framework demonstrate the ability to selectively probe interfaces, including those that are buried, with elemental specificity, providing a new tool for a range of scientific problems.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Slow Interatomic Coulombic Decay of Multiply Excited Neon Clusters

D. Iablonskyi; K. Nagaya; H. Fukuzawa; K. Motomura; Yoshiaki Kumagai; S. Mondal; T. Tachibana; Tsukasa Takanashi; T. Nishiyama; K. Matsunami; Per Johnsson; P. Piseri; Giuseppe Sansone; Antoine Dubrouil; Maurizio Reduzzi; Paolo Carpeggiani; Caterina Vozzi; Michele Devetta; M. Negro; Francesca Calegari; Andrea Trabattoni; M. C. Castrovilli; Davide Faccialà; Y. Ovcharenko; T. Möller; M. Mudrich; F. Stienkemeier; M. Coreno; Michele Alagia; B. Schütte

Ne clusters (∼5000  atoms) were resonantly excited (2p→3s) by intense free electron laser (FEL) radiation at FERMI. Such multiply excited clusters can decay nonradiatively via energy exchange between at least two neighboring excited atoms. Benefiting from the precise tunability and narrow bandwidth of seeded FEL radiation, specific sites of the Ne clusters were probed. We found that the relaxation of cluster surface atoms proceeds via a sequence of interatomic or intermolecular Coulombic decay (ICD) processes while ICD of bulk atoms is additionally affected by the surrounding excited medium via inelastic electron scattering. For both cases, cluster excitations relax to atomic states prior to ICD, showing that this kind of ICD is rather slow (picosecond range). Controlling the average number of excitations per cluster via the FEL intensity allows a coarse tuning of the ICD rate.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Polarization measurement of free electron laser pulses in the VUV generated by the variable polarization source FERMI

P. Finetti; E. Allaria; B. Diviacco; C. Callegari; B. Mahieu; Jens Viefhaus; Marco Zangrando; G. De Ninno; G. Lambert; Enrico Ferrari; Jens Buck; M. Ilchen; Boris Vodungbo; N. Mahne; Cristian Svetina; C. Spezzani; S. Di Mitri; G. Penco; M. Trovo; William M. Fawley; P. Rebernik; D. Gauthier; Cesare Grazioli; M. Coreno; B. Ressel; A. Kivimäki; T. Mazza; Leif Glaser; Frank Scholz; Joern Seltmann

FERMI, based at Elettra (Trieste, Italy) is the first free electron laser (FEL) facility operated for user experiments in seeded mode. Another unique property of FERMI, among other FEL sources, is to allow control of the polarization state of the radiation. Polarization dependence in the study of the interaction of coherent, high field, short-pulse ionizing radiation with matter, is a new frontier with potential in a wide range of research areas. The first measurement of the polarization-state of VUV light from a single-pass FEL was performed at FERMI FEL-1 operated in the 52 nm-26 nm range. Three different experimental techniques were used. The experiments were carried out at the end-station of two different beamlines to assess the impact of transport optics and provide polarization data for the end user. In this paper we summarize the results obtained from different setups. The results are consistent with each other and allow a general discussion about the viability of permanent diagnostics aimed at monitoring the polarization of FEL pulses.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Passive Linearization of the Magnetic Bunch Compression Using Self-Induced Fields

G. Penco; E. Allaria; Ivan Cudin; S. Di Mitri; D. Gauthier; S. Spampinati; M. Trovo; Luca Giannessi; Eléonore Roussel; S. Bettoni; P. Craievich; Enrico Ferrari

In linac-driven free-electron lasers, colliders, and energy recovery linacs, a common way to compress the electron bunch to kiloampere level is based upon the implementation of a magnetic dispersive element that converts particle energy deviation into a path-length difference. Nonlinearities of such a process are usually compensated by enabling a high harmonic rf structure properly tuned in amplitude and phase. This approach is however not straightforward, e.g., in C-band and X-band linacs. In this Letter we demonstrate that the longitudinal self-induced field excited by the electron beam itself is able to linearize the compression process without any use of high harmonic rf structure. The method is implemented at the FERMI linac, with the resulting high quality beam used to drive the seeded free-electron laser during user experiments.

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G. Penco

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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E. Allaria

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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M. Trovo

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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William M. Fawley

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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M.B. Danailov

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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B. Diviacco

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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P. Craievich

Paul Scherrer Institute

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L. Giannessi

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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D. Castronovo

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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S. Spampinati

Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste

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