The L4n is a nanosecond-kilojoule laser beamline that delivers temporally shapeable nanosecond pulses at a maximum energy of 1.2 kJ. It was recently commissioned at ELI Beamlines and offers unique opportunities for high-pressure, high-energy-density physics, and laser-plasma interaction experiments, particularly due to its high repetition rate of up to 1 shot per minute. Compared to other kJ-class laser systems worldwide, which offer much lower shot rates, the L4n driven experiments will enable significant improvements in collecting data statistics. The results gathered during the first L4n commissioning campaigns, demonstrate the laser capability to deliver hundreds of joules every three minutes with excellent repeatability and clearly show its potential to make significant contributions to the field of high-energy density physics in the coming decades.
Betatron radiation from laser-plasma accelerators reproduces the principle of a synchrotron on a millimeter scale, but featuring femtosecond duration. Here we present the outcome of our latest developments, which now allow us to produce stable and polarized X-ray bursts. Moreover, the X-ray polarization can simply be adjusted by tuning the polarization of the laser driving the process. The excellent stability of the source is expressed in terms of pointing, flux, transverse distribution and critical energy of the spectrum. These combined features make our betatron source particularly suitable for applications in ultrafast X-ray science.
In this presentation we will describe the generation process, relying on the ionization injection scheme for laser-plasma acceleration. We will show experimental measurements, numerical results and first applications in time-resolved spectroscopy.
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