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FLASH produces the shortest wavelength yet

6 June 2006

On 26 April, the vacuum-ultraviolet and soft X-ray free-electron laser (FEL) facility at DESY generated pulses at the shortest wavelength yet, using electron bunches supplied by the TESLA Test Facility (TTF) linac. The laser facility already produced the shortest wavelengths achieved with a FEL, with pulses at 32 nm. Now it has reached a new record with a wavelength of only 13.1 nm.

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Equipped with five superconducting accelerator modules, the TTF linac can accelerate electron bunches to an energy of 700 MeV. This is sufficient for the bunches to emit laser pulses at 13.1 nm as they subsequently traverse the undulator. A sixth module, to be installed in 2007, will allow a further increase in energy to 1 GeV, making it possible to generate wavelengths as low as 6 nm. The pulses produced are shorter than 50 fs, leading appropriately to the new name for the facility, FLASH, which was chosen to be simpler and more attractive than VUV-FEL.

After a successful first data-taking run that ended in February, on 8 May the newly named FLASH began once again to serve its users for a second measuring period.

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