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  2. Free-electron laser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free-electron_laser

    As electron kinetic energy and undulator parameters can be adapted as desired, free-electron lasers are tunable and can be built for a wider frequency range than any other type of laser, [3] currently ranging in wavelength from microwaves, through terahertz radiation and infrared, to the visible spectrum, ultraviolet, and X-ray.

  3. European XFEL - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_XFEL

    The European X-Ray Free-Electron Laser Facility (European XFEL) is an X-ray research laser facility commissioned during 2017. The first laser pulses were produced in May 2017 and the facility started user operation in September 2017.

  4. X-ray laser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-ray_laser

    An X-ray laser can be created by several methods either in hot, dense plasmas or as a free-electron laser in an accelerator. This article describes the x-ray lasers in plasmas, only. This article describes the x-ray lasers in plasmas, only.

  5. SACLA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SACLA

    The SPring-8 Angstrom Compact free electron LAser, referred to as SACLA (pronounced さくら (Sa-Ku-Ra)), is an X-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) in Harima Science Garden City, Japan, embedded in the SPring-8 accelerator and synchrotron complex. [1] [2] When it first came into operation 2011, it was the second XFEL in the world and the first in ...

  6. List of synchrotron radiation facilities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_synchrotron...

    Duke Free Electron Laser Laboratory (DFELL) Duke University, Durham, North Carolina: US 0.2 - 1.2 107.46 1994 Jefferson Laboratory Free Electron Laser (Jlab) Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility, Newport News, Virginia: US W. M. Keck Vanderbilt Free-electron Laser Center Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee: US

  7. Laser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laser

    The free-electron laser FELIX at the FOM Institute for Plasma Physics Rijnhuizen, Nieuwegein. Free-electron lasers (FEL) generate coherent, high-power radiation that is widely tunable, currently ranging in wavelength from microwaves through terahertz radiation and infrared to the visible spectrum, to soft X-rays. They have the widest frequency ...

  8. SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SLAC_National_Accelerator...

    [14] until 2017 when the European x-ray free electron laser opened. The main accelerator is buried 9 m (30 ft) below ground [15] and passes underneath Interstate Highway 280. The above-ground klystron gallery atop the beamline, was the longest building in the United States until the LIGO project's twin interferometers were completed in 1999. It ...

  9. SwissFEL - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SwissFEL

    SwissFEL is the X-ray free-electron laser at the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI), which was inaugurated in December 2016. [1] The SwissFEL design is optimised to generate X-ray pulses in the wavelength range of 1 Å to 70 Å. With an overall length of just under 740 metres, the system configuration is relatively compact.