4.4 Article Proceedings Paper

Laser effect on the 248 nm KrF transition using heavy ion beam pumping

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2007.02.030

Keywords

heavy ion beam; excimer transition; laser cavity; spontaneous and stimulated emission; laser threshold; spectral narrowing; time structure; deposited energy; particles per bunch; output power; laser efficiency

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In December 2005 the first successful operation of a UV excimer laser pumped with a heavy ion beam was demonstrated at GSI. It was the first experiment in which the specific power deposition was sufficient to overcome laser threshold for a UV excimer scheme. The well known KrF* excimer laser line at lambda = 248 nm has been chosen for this experiment, because the wavelength is short, but still in the range of usual optical diagnostic tools and the emitted light can propagate in air without attenuation. A bunch compressed U-238(+73) beam with a particle energy of 250 MeV/u and about 110 ns pulse duration (FWHM) was used for this experiment. Single pulses of a beam intensity up to 2.5 x 10(9) particles per bunch were focused into the laser cell along the cavity axis. Compact spectrometers, high speed UV-photodiodes and gated CCD-cameras were used for diagnostics of the spontaneous and stimulated emission. As a main result of the experiment laser effect on the 248 nm KrF* excimer laser line has been obtained and verified by temporal and spectral narrowing of the laser line as well as the threshold behaviour and exponential growth of intensity with increasing pumping power. In summary it could be shown that the pumping power of the heavy ion beam at GSI is now sufficient to pump short wavelength lasers. It is planned to extend laser experiments in near future to the VUV range of the spectrum (lambda<200nm). (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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