The pulse duration, and, more generally, the temporal intensity profile of free-electron laser (FEL)\ud
pulses, is of utmost importance for exploring the new perspectives offered by FELs; it is a nontrivial\ud
experimental parameter that needs to be characterized. We measured the pulse shape of an extreme\ud
ultraviolet externally seeded FEL operating in high-gain harmonic generation mode. Two different methods\ud
based on the cross-correlation of the FEL pulses with an external optical laser were used. The two methods,\ud
one capable of single-shot performance, may both be implemented as online diagnostics in FEL facilities.\ud
The measurements were carried out at the seeded FEL facility FERMI. The FEL temporal pulse\ud
characteristics were measured and studied in a range of FEL wavelengths and machine settings, and they\ud
were compared to the predictions of a theoretical model. The measurements allowed a direct observation of\ud
the pulse lengthening and splitting at saturation, in agreement with the proposed theory
Plasmas were generated by 400 fs KrF laser pulses at intensities of ~~10 17 Wcm -2 on aluminum targets. Reflectivity and x-ray emission were measured as a function of laser polarization, angle of incidence, and intensity. For the same absorbed intensity, p-polarized laser light is up to a factor of 5 more efficient in generating x rays ( > 0.5 keV) than s-polarized light. These results show the importance of an additional absorption process, besides collisional absorption, for short scale length plasmas that is effective for /^-polarized light only and has the characteristics of resonance absorption.
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