Paper
12 July 1994 Characteristics of an ultrafast x-ray streak camera
Ronnie L. Shepherd, Rex Booth, Dwight F. Price, Mark Whitman Bowers, Don A. Swan, James D. Bonlie, Bruce KF Young, James Dunn, William E. White, Richard E. Stewart
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Abstract
The detection and temporal dispersion of the x rays using x ray streak cameras has been limited to a resolution of 2 ps, primarily due to the transit time dispersion of the electrons between the photocathode and the acceleration grid. The transit time spread of the electrons traveling from the photocathode to the acceleration grid is inversely proportional to the accelerating field. By increasing the field by a factor of 7, we have minimized the effects of transit time dispersion in the photocathode/accelerating grid region and produce an x-ray streak camera with sub-picosecond temporal resolution (approximately equals 900 fs). The streak camera has been calibrated using a Michelson interferometer and 100 fs, 400 nm laser light. Time resolved x-ray data is shown from an aluminum target heated at 1018 W/cm2 with a 100 fs, 400 nm laser.
© (1994) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ronnie L. Shepherd, Rex Booth, Dwight F. Price, Mark Whitman Bowers, Don A. Swan, James D. Bonlie, Bruce KF Young, James Dunn, William E. White, and Richard E. Stewart "Characteristics of an ultrafast x-ray streak camera", Proc. SPIE 2278, X-Ray and UV Detectors, (12 July 1994); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.180003
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Electrons

X-rays

Streak cameras

Temporal resolution

Picosecond phenomena

Calibration

Ultrafast phenomena

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