Abstract
The appearance of very low emittance, high-power synchrotron sources
has resulted in ever longer beamlines, often requiring a very weak
curvature on the mirrors that transport the beam to the experiment,
where the radius of curvature is on the order of kilometers.
Manufacturing weakly curved, low figure error grazing incidence
mirrors is difficult as the mirrors must be manufactured to an
accuracy comparable to the wavelength of the transmitted light. Often
the delivered mirrors have figure errors at various length scales
(general shape, slope errors, roughness), which compromise image
quality. An error in general shape, like the radii of a toroidal
mirror, results in long-sighted or short-sighted imaging that is not
so simply corrected by changing the distances and incidence angles as
the mirror controls the beam focus in both vertical and horizontal
directions; for a toroidal mirror, the tangential and sagittal radii
need to match correctly for the desired focusing effect. Adaptive
downstream optics can compensate for this. In this paper, an
alternative method to reduce the sensitivity to a large radius error
outside the specified tolerance range in the first mirror of a plane
grating monochromator beamline at MAX IV is presented. It is found
that distributed focusing by two passive, fixed radius mirrors reduces
greatly the sensitivity to the radius errors in both mirrors. The
radius tolerance of a mirror initially found to be unacceptable for
single stage focusing is easily accommodated on both mirrors in
distributed focusing, without compromising the imaging capability.
Funder
VINNOVA
Vetenskapsrådet
Svenska Forskningsrödet
Formas
Subject
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Engineering (miscellaneous),Electrical and Electronic Engineering