4.8 Article

Sub-femtosecond precision measurement of relative X-ray arrival time for free-electron lasers

Journal

NATURE PHOTONICS
Volume 8, Issue 9, Pages 706-709

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/NPHOTON.2014.164

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Marie Curie fellowship
  2. National Center of Competence in Research, Molecular Ultrafast Science and Technology

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Today's brightest coherent X-ray sources, X-ray free-electron lasers, produce ultrafast X-ray pulses for which full-width at half-maximum durations as short as 3 fs have been measured(1). There has been a marked increase in the popularity of such short pulses now that optical timing techniques have begun to report an X-ray/optical delay below similar to 10 fs r.m.s. errors. As a result, sub-10 fs optical pulses have been implemented at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) X-ray beamlines, thus warranting a push to reduce the error in X-ray/optical delay measurements to the ifs level. Here, we report a unique two-dimensional spectrogram measurement of the relative X-ray/optical delay. This easily scalable relative delay measurement already surpasses previous techniques by an order of magnitude with its sub-1 fs temporal resolution and opens up the prospect of time-resolved X-ray measurements to the attosecond community.

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