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Continuously tunable, high-power, single-mode radiation from a short-pulse free-electron laser

Author
Abstract

This paper gives the first demonstration of high-power, continuously tunable, narrowband radiation that is produced by means of a free-electron laser (FEL) in the far-infrared region of the electromagnetic spectrum. A Fox-Smith intracavity etalon was used to induce phase coherence between the 40 optical micropulses that were circulating in the laser cavity. The corresponding phase-locked spectrum consisted of a comb of discrete frequencies separated by 1 GHz. A pair of external Fabry-Perot etalons was used to filter out a single line from this spectrum. The power in the selected narrow line at 69 mu m wavelength was equal to 250 mW during the macropulse of the laser. The spectral width of the selected line is as small as that of a single cavity mode, i.e., a fraction of 25 MHz, in;single macropulses of the laser. The average bandwidth of 25 MHz is determined by mode hopping of the phase-locked FEL. The selected frequency hops over 25 MHz between the extrema of this band. The influence of partially coherent spontaneous emission and mode hopping on the final linewidth was studied. The narrow-linewidth radiation was scanned in frequency over 1 GHz. We show that the possibilities to scan over smaller or larger frequency intervals are unlimited. [S1063-651X(99)04607-3].

Year of Publication
1999
Journal
Physical Review E
Volume
60
Number
1
Number of Pages
946-956
Date Published
Jul
ISBN Number
1063-651X
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevE.60.946
PId
396370dfec5362895a2d80260e14ab8a
Journal Article
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