Title: Laser%20Systems%20and%20Instrumentation
1Laser Systems and Instrumentation
- D. McCormick, J. Frisch, T. Kotseroglou,
- M. Ross, D. Schultz
Josef Frisch
2NLC Laser systemsKey technical requirements
- Laser Wire Lasers Beam profile measurement.
- High peak power gt10MW
- Clean TEM00 Mode output required
- Large number of systems 40 lasers, 200
Interaction points. - Some single bunch systems, some multi-bunch
- Polarized Source Lasers Drive polarized
photocathodes - Require control of wavelength, pulse shape
- Require exceptional (lt0.5 RMS) intensity control
3Source Laser Requirements
4Source Laser Technical Choices Baseline Design.
- Use conventional materials
- Titanium Sapphire for main laser.
- Flash lamp pumped Neodymium YAG for pump laser.
- Pulse shaping
- Use dispersive pulse shaping to avoid exotic
electronics. - Intensity stability control
- Use long pump pulse / feedback for intensity
stabilization. - This is the most difficult requirement exceeds
state of the art for lasers of this complexity. - Reliability
- Use dual laser systems with automatic switch over
5Source Laser Baseline Design Block Diagram
6NLC Source Laser Technical Risks
- Intensity stability requirement exceeds state of
the art - System reliability must be exceptionally high for
a complex laser. - System uses flash lamps, requiring significant
maintenance.
7Source Laser Technical Challenge Complexity
8Other Source Laser System Components
- Polarization, Intensity, Steering, Spot size
control. - Requirements similar to SLAC,
- not expected to be a technical problem.
- Beam transport line
- Use conventional vacuum hardware, minimal
technical risk - Photocathode
- The performance of the photocathode directly
influences the source laser requirements. - Photocathode RD will reduce laser uncertainties
9Source Laser Cost Model
- Use Baseline Design
- Bottoms up costing
- Use commercial parts where possible
- EDI and Labor costs based on engineering
judgement from SLAC experience with laser
development - Items included
- 2 Source lasers at gun, 1 at test lab, 1 spare
- Clean rooms required for operating lasers
- 1 Prototype laser required.
- RD required to reduce cost and risk
- Source laser costs 4-10 Million (breakdown
dependant)
10Laser Wire Requirements
11Laser Wire Baseline System Technical Choices -
Single bunch system
- Use commercial Q-switched Neodymium YAG laser
- Provides gt30MW at 350nm wavelength (sufficient)
- Good transverse mode quality
- Technical issues
- System is long pulse (4 nanosecond), high energy
(gt100mJ). Optical damage is a concern - System uses flash lamps, maintenance required.
- Relatively high cost.
12Laser Wire Technical Choices Multi-bunch system
- Use a variant of the NLC source laser, with
recompression and frequency doubling - System has very similar requirements
- Most technical risk already assumed in the source
laser. - Potential for time resolved measurements of
electron bunches. - Exceptional timing stability required for this
- Technical Issues
- Complexity more severe than for source due to
the larger number of lasers - Maintenance requirements high due to flash lamps
- Cost
13Other Laser Wire Technical Issues
- Optical Final Focus
- Operates at approximately F/4
- Commercial optics usable with little or no
modification - Semiconductor industry has experience with small
spot, ultraviolet focus lenses. - Laser Timing
- Timing requirements depend on optical pulse
length - Single bunch baseline system not a problem
- Multi-bunch system State of the art performance
required. - Detector Electronics
- Single bunch conventional
- Multi bunch Fast electronics, but within state
of the art.
14Laser Wire Cost Model
- Bottoms up costing
- Single bunch systems use commercial lasers
- Multi bunch systems use variants of the polarized
source laser - Single lasers drive all IPs within 100 Meters
- IPs use commercial focus lenses.
- Clean rooms used for lasers.
- Total cost 40 - 70 Million
- Cost may be reduced substantially after RD.
15Laser RD (Source and Laser Wire)
- Source laser and Laser Wires use similar
technologies - Investigate laser technologies which can reduce
complexity and cost, and improve performance. - Use diode laser for source seed
- Greatly reduced complexity
- Limited tuning range, electrical bandwidth
- Diode pumped lasers eliminate flash lamps
- CrLiSAF laser crystal Directly produce
required wavelength for source laser - YbYAG laser crystal Diode pumped, high
efficiency, directly produce short pulses for
laser wire.
16Laser RD Continued
- Diode pumped pump lasers
- Eliminate flashlamps.
- Less technically challenging than direct diode
pumping final laser - Increased optics automation - reduce the need for
expert tweaking of laser systems - If new technologies do not perform as required
- Study performance of conventional systems
- construct conventional prototype
- Laser technology is rapidly developing - new
solutions may be developed.
17Laser RD Plan Outline
- Laser RD partially done after CDR
- Laser System initial RD
- 1160K, 6 Man years total. FY2001-2002
- Laser System Prototype and DFM
- 875K, 7.5 Man years total. FY2003-2004
18Other beam line instrumentation
- Baseline costs estimated based on prior
experience (top down). Most technical risks are
small, and minimal RD is required. Total costs
17M - Wire scanners (conventional) 3.8M
- PIC (ion chambers) 3.1M (some RD to reduce
costs) - Profile Monitors 2.7M
- Stored beam loss monitors 387K
- Bunch length monitor (microwave) 260K
- Low energy polarimeter 250K total
- Farady Cup 140K total
- PMT loss monitors 48K
- Gap monitor 42K
19More Beam Line Instrumentation
- Some instrumentation requires RD
- PLIC cables - long ion chambers
- Multi bunch use requires deconvolving signal
- RD covered in the MPS section (primary use of
PLIC) - Estimated total system cost 3.3M
- Synchrotron monitor / Streak camera
- Need to work near resolution limit for damping
rings - RD underway at ATF
- Possibly use XUV / X-ray for improved resolution
- Estimated system cost 1.3M
- Tune monitor
- Prototype working at ATF
- Estimated total system cost 600K
20Yet More Beam Line Instrumentation
- Spot size monitor (Shintake style)
- Can work at secondary focus, probably not at IP
- estimated cost 2M
- Final focus instrumentation
- Beamstrahlung monitor
- Luminosity monitor
- Disrupted beam instrumentation
- Energy spectrometer
- Polarimeter
- Beam timing monitor
21Lasers and Instrumentation Summary
- Source Laser
- Technically challenging
- Critical to machine operation
- Extensive RD effort expected
- Laser Wires
- Can use source laser technology
- Expensive subsystem
- RD to reduce system costs / increase reliability
- Other instrumentation
- Many systems to be developed
- Some RD required
- No technological show stoppers