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JOURNALS // Uspekhi Fizicheskikh Nauk // Archive

UFN, 1989 Volume 159, Number 1, Pages 125–142 (Mi ufn7697)

This article is cited in 93 papers

PHYSICS OF OUR DAYS

Tunable Coherent X-rays

D. Attwood, K. Halbach, K.-J. Kim

Center for X-ray Optics, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA

Abstract: A modern 1- to 2-billion-electron-volt synchrotron radiation facility (based on high-brightness electron beams and magnetic undulators) would generate coherent (laser-like) soft x-rays of wavelengths as short as 10 angstroms. The radiation would also be broadly tunable and subject to full polarization control. Radiation with these properties could be used for phase- and element-sensitive microprobing of biological assemblies and material interfaces as well as reserch on the production of electronic microstructures with features smaller than 1000 angstroms. These short wavelength capabilities, which extend to the K-absorption edges of carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen, are neither available nor projected for laboratory XUV lasers. Higher energy storage rings (5 to 6 billion electron volts) would generate significantly less coherent radiation and would be further compromised by additional x-ray thermal loading of optical components.

UDC: 621.378.325

DOI: 10.3367/UFNr.0159.198909d.0125


 English version:
Physics–Uspekhi, 1985, 228, 1265–1272


© Steklov Math. Inst. of RAS, 2026