Development of an adjustable Kirkpatrick-Baez microscope for laser driven x-ray sources at CLPU
Abstract
A promising prototype of a highly adjustable Kirkpatrick-Baez (KB) microscope has been designed, built and tested in a number of laser driven x-ray experiments using the high power (200TW) VEGA-2 laser system of the Spanish Centre for Pulsed Lasers (CLPU). The presented KB version consists of two, perpendicularly mounted, 500μm thick Silicon wafers, coated with a few tens of nm layer of Platinum unlike the conventional, coated, millimetre thick glass substrates, affording more bending flexibility and large adjustment range. According to simulations, and based on total external reflection, this KB offers a broad-band multi-keV reflection spectra, allowing more spectral tunablity than conventional Bragg crystals. In addition to be vacuum compatible, the prototype is characterised by a relatively small size (21cm x 31cm x 27cm) and permits remote control and modification of both the radius of curvature (down to 10m) and the grazing incidence angle (up to 60mrad). A few examples of focusing performance tests, limitations and experimental campaign results are discussed.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.