Paper
14 September 1977 Picosecond X-Ray Chronoscopy
D. Landheer, W. Sibbett, M. H. Key, M. J. Lamb, C. S.L. Lewis, J. Lunney
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 0097, 12th Intl Congress on High Speed Photography; (1977) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.955218
Event: 12th International Congress on High Speed Photography, 1976, Toronto, Canada
Abstract
Improvements in the time resolution of an ultrafast streak-camera for vacuum UV to x-radiation are described. Pin hole optics were used to image the x-rays from a 100 4m laser-produced plasma onto the gold photocathode of the camera. The plasmas were produced by focusing single, amplified (80 mJ) pulses from a mode-locked Nd: glass oscillator on to a copper target. A temporal resolution of <22 psec has been demonstrated in both the oblique and normal incidence modes of operation of the tube. Limits on the ultimate resolution are discussed and a new design for the electron optics of the image tube, which may overcome these limitations, is proposed.
© (1977) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
D. Landheer, W. Sibbett, M. H. Key, M. J. Lamb, C. S.L. Lewis, and J. Lunney "Picosecond X-Ray Chronoscopy", Proc. SPIE 0097, 12th Intl Congress on High Speed Photography, (14 September 1977); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.955218
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KEYWORDS
Plasma

X-rays

Cameras

Temporal resolution

Picosecond phenomena

Gold

Copper

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