TIMEX collaboration project: overview
The development of the TIMEX end-station installed at the Fermi@ELETTRA free-electron laser (FEL) has been proposed by the XAS group @ Camerino University and financed by Sincrotrone Trieste within a collaboration agreement between two research groups (EIS beamline, Fermi@ELETTRA Trieste, XAS group Camerino University).
The TIMEX project was approved in late 2007, it has been active in the years 2008-2012 and is now suspended. The TIMEX end-station is currently operated by the EIS beamline team (EIS-TIMEX beamline).
The collaboration project was aimed at: 1) design, building and commissioning the TIMEX end-station; 2) conceiving a long-term scientific program for the end-station; 3) performance and analysis of pilot experiments assisting successive FEL measurements; 4) performance and analysis of the first FEL experiments using the TIMEX end-station.
The original planned schedule was delayed for various reasons including: 1) postponed date of delivery (2011) of controlled FEL1 pulses; 2) postponed date of delivery (mid 2013) of optical (seed) laser pulses; 3) postponed date for delivery (late 2013) of the elliptical focusing mirror.
Taking into account those delays, our efforts were first concentrated in designing and commissioning of the beamline and in the performance of pilot experiments (see list of publications). A review of the status (June 2013), advances and results achieved within the TIMEX collaboration using the FEL1 source can be found in the report
Science
With the advent of 4th generation free electron laser (FEL) light sources, which provide ultra-short pulses and high photon numbers per pulse in the VUV to X-ray wavelength range, a wide variety of experiments ranging from condensed matter physics to plasma physics becomes now accessible for the first time.
The aim of the TIMEX project has been the design and construction of an end-station to investigate metastable and/or excited states of matter under extreme conditions at the Italian FERMI@Elettra free electron laser facility.
The energy and intensity of the Fermi@Elettra FEL pulses is suitable for an efficient ultrafast heating of most bulk-like dense samples. The original scientific program was intended to exploit this unique source for two classes of experiments:
Reference papers for the main scientific topics, setup, and preliminary experimental
results related to the TIMEX project (end-station) are:
Publication list
Highlights
- TIMEX peak temperature diagnostics published on PRL
- TIMEX pilot experiment on surface melting of Si published on PRL
- Pilot experiments and TIMEX science
- Beam-shaping focusing capabilities
- WDM diagnostic devices: temperature