Abstract
High-speed adaptive correction of optics, based on real-time metrology
feedback, has benefitted numerous scientific communities for several
decades. However, it remains a major technological challenge to extend
this concept into the hard x ray regime due to the necessity for
active mirrors with single-digit nanometer height errors relative to a
range of aspheric forms. We have developed a high-resolution,
real-time, closed-loop “adaptive” optical system for
synchrotron and x ray free electron laser (XFEL) applications. After
calibration of the wavefront using x ray speckle scanning, the
wavefront diagnostic was removed from the x ray beam path.
Non-invasive control of the size and shape of the
reflected x ray beam was then demonstrated by driving a
piezoelectric deformable bimorph mirror at
∼
1
H
z
. Continuous feedback was provided by
a 20 kHz direct measurement of the optical surface with
picometer sensitivity using an array of interferometric sensors. This
enabled a non-specialist operator to reproduce a series of pre-defined
x ray wavefronts, including focused or non-Gaussian profiles, such as
flattop intensity or multiple split peaks with controllable separation
and relative amplitude. Such changes can be applied in any order and
in rapid succession without the need for invasive wavefront diagnostic
sensors that block the x ray beam for scientific usage. These
innovations have the potential to profoundly change how x ray focusing
elements are utilized at synchrotron radiation and XFEL sources and
provide unprecedented dynamic control of photon beams to aid
scientific discoveries in a wide range of disciplines.
Subject
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Cited by
7 articles.
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